Reasons for Surgery and Surgery Risk
Perioperative Nursing
Anesthesia and Surgical Technology
Surgical Safety, Consent, and Psychological Preparation
Operating Room Roles and Postoperative Complications
100

Surgery may be performed to diagnose, cure, repair, remove, replace, or relieve symptoms of a health problem.

Reasons surgery is performed

100

This term refers to nursing care before, during, and after surgery.

Perioperative nursing

100

This type of anesthesia causes loss of consciousness and sensation for major surgery.

General anesthesia

100

Confirming the patient’s identity, procedure, consent, and surgical site helps prevent this.

Surgical errors

100

This sterile team member handles sterile instruments, supplies, and equipment during surgery.

The scrub person

200

A biopsy is an example of surgery performed for this purpose.

Diagnosis

200

This phase includes assessment, teaching, consent verification, lab review, and preparing the patient for surgery.

The preoperative phase

200

This type of anesthesia numbs one area of the body while the patient remains awake or lightly sedated.

Local anesthesia

200

Marking the correct surgical site and performing a time-out are safety measures used to prevent this.

Wrong-site surgery

200

This nonsterile nurse coordinates care, documents, obtains supplies, and protects patient safety during surgery.

The circulating nurse

300

Removal of a diseased appendix or gallbladder is an example of surgery performed for this purpose.

Treatment or cure

300

This phase begins when the patient enters the operating room and ends when the patient is transferred to recovery.

The intraoperative phase

300

Spinal, epidural, and nerve blocks are examples of this type of anesthesia.

Regional anesthesia

300

The nurse may witness this form but does not explain the surgical procedure or risks.

The surgical consent form

300

Turning, coughing, deep breathing, incentive spirometry, and early ambulation help prevent this postoperative complication.

Atelectasis or pneumonia

400

Age, poor nutrition, obesity, smoking, diabetes, infection, and chronic illness may increase this.

Surgical risk or risk for postoperative complications

400

This phase includes monitoring vital signs, pain, airway, bleeding, wound status, and complications after surgery.

The postoperative phase

400

This type of medication may be given to help the patient relax and decrease anxiety during a procedure.

Sedation

400

The provider is responsible for explaining the procedure, risks, benefits, and alternatives before the patient signs this.

Informed consent

400

Leg exercises, sequential compression devices, hydration, and early ambulation help prevent this circulatory complication.

Venous thromboembolism or DVT, or pulmonary embolism

500

Heart disease, lung disease, kidney disease, and uncontrolled diabetes are examples of conditions that may increase this after surgery.

The risk for complications

500

The nurse’s role throughout perioperative care is to protect safety, provide teaching, reduce anxiety, and monitor for this.

Complications

500

Smaller incisions, less tissue trauma, less pain, and shorter hospital stays are ways this type of surgery may shorten recovery time.

Robotic or minimally invasive surgery

500

Listening to fears, answering within scope, providing teaching, encouraging questions, and supporting coping help prepare the patient in this way.

Psychological preparation for surgery

500

Monitoring the incision, drainage, temperature, pain, redness, swelling, and wound edges helps detect this postoperative complication.

Infection or wound complication

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