January 6, 2025

Nursing Tip of the Day! - Critical Care Nursing

Category: Critical Care Nursing 
ScvO2 also helps to detect return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) rapidly without interruption of chest compressions, because ROSC will result in a rapid increase in ScvO2 as oxygen delivery to tissues dramatically increases.

January 5, 2025

Nursing Tip of the Day! - Critical Care Nursing

Category: Critical Care Nursing 
ScvO2 values normally range from 60% to 80%. During cardiac arrest and CPR, these values range from 25% to 35%, indicating greatly enhanced oxygen extraction of tissues owing to the inadequacy of oxygen delivery during CPR.

January 4, 2025

Nursing Tip of the Day! - Critical Care Nursing

Category: Critical Care Nursing 
Central venous oxygen saturation, ScvO2, can be used to monitor resuscitative measures. The mixed venous blood oxygen saturation in the pulmonary artery (SvO2) represents the oxygen remaining in the blood after systemic extraction.

January 3, 2025

Nursing Tip of the Day! - Critical Care Nursing

Category: Critical Care Nursing 
PETCO2 monitoring is valuable in patients after return of spontaneous circulation to monitor endotracheal tube placement, titrate minute ventilation to avoid hyperventilation and detect sudden hemodynamic deterioration.

January 2, 2025

Nursing Tip of the Day! - Critical Care Nursing

Category: Critical Care Nursing 
Return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) causes immediate and significant increases in PETCO2. Therefore, PETCO2 monitoring can detect ROSC at any time during the chest compression cycle, providing valuable guidance.

January 1, 2025

Nursing Tip of the Day! - Critical Care Nursing

Category: Critical Care Nursing 
PETCO2 monitoring also can aid in the diagnosis and treatment of PEA. Patients in a state of PEA with mechanical heart activity may have pulsatile flow that simply cannot be detected by palpation of a pulse.

December 31, 2024

Nursing Tip of the Day! - Critical Care Nursing

Category: Critical Care Nursing 
Resuscitation after cardiac arrest is likely to fail if PETCO2 values of 10 mm Hg or more are not achieved. Therefore, values less than 10 mm Hg should prompt the clinician to enhance the quality of CPR.

December 30, 2024

Nursing Tip of the Day! - Critical Care Nursing

Category: Critical Care Nursing 
PETCO2 depends on CO2 production, alveolar ventilation, and pulmonary blood flow (ie, cardiac output) and correlates well with coronary perfusion pressure and cerebral perfusion pressure during CPR.

December 29, 2024

Nursing Tip of the Day! - Critical Care Nursing

Category: Critical Care Nursing 
The partial pressure of CO2 in exhaled air at the end of expiration (PETCO2) can be a reliable indicator of cardiac output during CPR. This is most reliably measured through waveform capnography after endotracheal intubation.

December 28, 2024

Nursing Tip of the Day! - Critical Care Nursing

Category: Critical Care Nursing 
Electrocardiographic monitoring during cardiac arrest indicates the presence or absence of electrical but not mechanical activity. It also does not provide reliable information regarding the effectiveness of CPR.

December 27, 2024

Nursing Tip of the Day! - Critical Care Nursing

Category: Critical Care Nursing 
Dependent lividity and rigor mortis develop after hours of cardiac arrest. Temperature is an unreliable predictor of duration of cardiac arrest because it does not decrease significantly during the first hours of arrest.

December 26, 2024

Nursing Tip of the Day! - Critical Care Nursing

Category: Critical Care Nursing 
After the initial minutes of cardiac arrest, the physical examination may provide little evidence of the duration of arrest. Pupils dilate within 1 minute but constrict if CPR is initiated immediately and performed effectively.

December 25, 2024

Nursing Tip of the Day! - Critical Care Nursing

Category: Critical Care Nursing 
Primary respiratory arrest results in transient tachycardia followed by hypertension due to mounting hypoxia, then a loss of consciousness, with tachycardia then transitioning to bradycardia and finally, pulselessness occurs.

December 24, 2024

Nursing Tip of the Day! - Critical Care Nursing

Category: Critical Care Nursing 
With sudden onset of cardiac arrest, as in ventricular fibrillation, loss of consciousness occurs within 15 seconds, although agonal gasping respirations may persist for several minutes.

December 23, 2024

Nursing Tip of the Day! - Critical Care Nursing

Category: Critical Care Nursing 
Cardiopulmonary arrest is defined by the triad of unconsciousness, apnea and pulselessness. The pulse is palpated in a large artery (carotid or femoral). If any question exists about the diagnosis of pulselessness, CPR should be initiated.