Nursing care and post-operative delirium in the cardiac surgery intensive care unit

Post-operative delirium is a debilitating and costly adverse event that has detrimental effects on patients’ recovery and complicates nursing care. Its numerous risk factors make the disorder seem unavoidable and unpreventable. Although pre-operative and intra-operative risk factors for delirium may...

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Main Author: Taipale, Priscilla Gail
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/29278
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.-292782013-06-05T04:19:00ZNursing care and post-operative delirium in the cardiac surgery intensive care unitTaipale, Priscilla GailPost-operative delirium is a debilitating and costly adverse event that has detrimental effects on patients’ recovery and complicates nursing care. Its numerous risk factors make the disorder seem unavoidable and unpreventable. Although pre-operative and intra-operative risk factors for delirium may not be controllable, the post-operative risk factors directly related to nursing practice are directly controllable. Practices to control pain through analgesia and sedation administration given at nurses’ prerogative may be associated with the onset of delirium in the immediate post-operative period. This study examined opioid and benzodiazepine administration given pro-re-nata (PRN) (“as needed”) by nurses to cardiac surgery patients to determine whether a relationship exists between delirium and nurses’ drug administration. One hundred twenty-two patients were assessed during the first three days following cardiac surgery for delirium with the Confusion Assessment Method for the Intensive Care Unit (CAM-ICU). Data were collected regarding potential risk factors and opioid analgesia and benzodiazepine dosages given to the patients. A retrospective chart review was conducted to determine whether the patients had a physician’s clinical assessment and diagnosis of delirium. Post-operative delirium occurred in 37.7% to 44.3% of the study sample, depending on how the cases that had positive CAM-ICU assessments and no clinical diagnoses of delirium were handled. The amount of opioid analgesia given to these patients varied widely; however, the total dosage over the 72-hour study period had no statistically significant relationship with the development of delirium (Median = 77.2 morphine equivalents (MEs) for group without delirium vs. 79.3 MEs for group with delirium; Mann-Whitney U = 1697, Z = -0.72, p = .47). The amount of Midazolam administered also varied widely. There was a statistically significant and positive relationship between the dosage of Midazolam given and the development of post-operative delirium (Median = 2.0 mg. for group without delirium vs. 4.0 mg. for group with delirium; Mann-Whitney U = 1393, Z = -2.31, p = .021). The results of this study indicate that better nursing education and changes in nurses’ practice may be required to protect patients from experiencing drug-induced post-operative delirium.University of British Columbia2010-10-18T17:20:19Z2010-10-18T17:20:19Z20102010-10-18T17:20:19Z2010-11Electronic Thesis or Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/2429/29278eng
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language English
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description Post-operative delirium is a debilitating and costly adverse event that has detrimental effects on patients’ recovery and complicates nursing care. Its numerous risk factors make the disorder seem unavoidable and unpreventable. Although pre-operative and intra-operative risk factors for delirium may not be controllable, the post-operative risk factors directly related to nursing practice are directly controllable. Practices to control pain through analgesia and sedation administration given at nurses’ prerogative may be associated with the onset of delirium in the immediate post-operative period. This study examined opioid and benzodiazepine administration given pro-re-nata (PRN) (“as needed”) by nurses to cardiac surgery patients to determine whether a relationship exists between delirium and nurses’ drug administration. One hundred twenty-two patients were assessed during the first three days following cardiac surgery for delirium with the Confusion Assessment Method for the Intensive Care Unit (CAM-ICU). Data were collected regarding potential risk factors and opioid analgesia and benzodiazepine dosages given to the patients. A retrospective chart review was conducted to determine whether the patients had a physician’s clinical assessment and diagnosis of delirium. Post-operative delirium occurred in 37.7% to 44.3% of the study sample, depending on how the cases that had positive CAM-ICU assessments and no clinical diagnoses of delirium were handled. The amount of opioid analgesia given to these patients varied widely; however, the total dosage over the 72-hour study period had no statistically significant relationship with the development of delirium (Median = 77.2 morphine equivalents (MEs) for group without delirium vs. 79.3 MEs for group with delirium; Mann-Whitney U = 1697, Z = -0.72, p = .47). The amount of Midazolam administered also varied widely. There was a statistically significant and positive relationship between the dosage of Midazolam given and the development of post-operative delirium (Median = 2.0 mg. for group without delirium vs. 4.0 mg. for group with delirium; Mann-Whitney U = 1393, Z = -2.31, p = .021). The results of this study indicate that better nursing education and changes in nurses’ practice may be required to protect patients from experiencing drug-induced post-operative delirium.
author Taipale, Priscilla Gail
spellingShingle Taipale, Priscilla Gail
Nursing care and post-operative delirium in the cardiac surgery intensive care unit
author_facet Taipale, Priscilla Gail
author_sort Taipale, Priscilla Gail
title Nursing care and post-operative delirium in the cardiac surgery intensive care unit
title_short Nursing care and post-operative delirium in the cardiac surgery intensive care unit
title_full Nursing care and post-operative delirium in the cardiac surgery intensive care unit
title_fullStr Nursing care and post-operative delirium in the cardiac surgery intensive care unit
title_full_unstemmed Nursing care and post-operative delirium in the cardiac surgery intensive care unit
title_sort nursing care and post-operative delirium in the cardiac surgery intensive care unit
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/29278
work_keys_str_mv AT taipalepriscillagail nursingcareandpostoperativedeliriuminthecardiacsurgeryintensivecareunit
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