Deep in the Ducts
This system includes the pancreas’ hormone‑secreting functions, helping regulate blood sugar levels.
What is the endocrine system?
This severe chemotherapy complication can progress to multi‑organ failure if untreated, making it one of the most life‑threatening outcomes for pancreatic cancer patients.
What is sepsis?
This priority sign of pancreatic cancer involves foul‑smelling, greasy stool caused by fat malabsorption.
What is steatorrhea?
This nursing intervention is essential because pancreatic tumors often cause severe abdominal and back pain.
What is managing pain aggressively?
A patient with jaundice reports this worsening symptom, often caused by bile salt accumulation in the skin.
What is worsening pruritus?
This factor most improves the chance of curing pancreatic cancer, emphasizing the importance of timing.
What is detection at an early stage?
This complication of pancreatic cancer often leads to intense abdominal pain, malabsorption, and weight loss due to inflammation and enzyme leakage.
What is pancreatitis?
In adults over 50, the new onset of this metabolic condition may contribute to unintentional weight loss and signal pancreatic cancer risk.
What is diabetes?
Nurses monitor this closely because patients with pancreatic cancer are at high risk for malnutrition and cachexia.
What is nutrition and weight?
A patient with steatorrhea asks what diet they should follow.
What are small, frequent, low‑fat meals with pancreatic enzymes?
Pancreatic cancer is known for this characteristic because it is often diagnosed late, leading to a poor prognosis.
What is extreme aggressiveness?
This chemotherapy complication often presents with fever, profound fatigue, and a dangerously low ability to fight infection.
What is neutropenia?
This typically painless condition presents with yellowing of the skin and sclera, dark urine, and clay‑colored stool
What is jaundice?
These precautions are necessary because weakness and opioid use increase the risk of injury.
What are fall precautions?
A patient with pancreatic cancer and jaundice is at highest risk for this complication.
What is impaired nutrition due to malabsorption?
Most pancreatic cancers arise from this type of malignant growth in the cells that line the pancreatic ducts.
What is pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma?
This intervention helps prevent hypovolemia in patients with pancreatic cancer.
What is providing intravenous fluids?
For confirming a small pancreatic tumor, this test provides the most accurate tissue sampling and visualization.
What is an endoscopic ultrasound?
This specialty team helps manage complex symptoms, improve comfort, and support quality of life throughout pancreatic cancer treatment.
What is palliative care?
A patient’s epigastric pain becomes worse when lying flat and improves when leaning forward, a classic pattern linked to this underlying complication.
What is pancreatic inflammation?
Pancreatic cancer typically begins as these noninvasive lesions, which are curable if detected.
What are precancerous lesions?
This life‑threatening complication occurs when a tumor compresses the intestines, leading to vomiting, abdominal distention, and inability to pass stool or gas.
What is bowel obstruction?
This assessment finding often appears alongside unintended weight loss, early satiety, and fatigue in patients with pancreatic cancer experiencing a decreased desire to eat.
What is anorexia?
Patients are taught to eat meals this way to maintain intake despite early satiety and weight loss.
What are small, high‑calorie meals?
A patient with pancreatic cancer suddenly develops severe abdominal pain radiating to the back, nausea, and a rigid abdomen. Their respirations are becoming shallow.
What is notify the provider immediately?