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Vital Signs Define Various determinations that provide information about the patients basic body condition Often the first sign that there is a problem.

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Presentation on theme: "Vital Signs Define Various determinations that provide information about the patients basic body condition Often the first sign that there is a problem."— Presentation transcript:

1 Vital Signs Define Various determinations that provide information about the patients basic body condition Often the first sign that there is a problem

2 VITAL SIGNS Temperature Pulse Respirations Blood Pressure

3 Other Vital Signs Pain assessment Skin color Pupil size and reaction
Level of consciousness Response to stimuli

4 Temperature Measurement of the balance between heat loss and heat produce Types Oral - mouth Rectal - rectum Axillary - armpit Aural (tympanic) – ear

5 Heat Produced and Lost Heat Produced Heat Lost Metabolism of food
Muscle and gland activity Heat Lost Perspiration Respiration Excretion of feces and urine

6 Normal Body Temperature
Normal range 97 – 100 degrees F

7 Variations in Normal Body Temperature
Lower in morning Higher in evening Eating or drinking anything hot or cold, smoking a cigarette or exercising in the last 15 minutes Measured in degrees Celsius or degrees Fahrenheit

8

9 Oral Temperature Taken in the mouth
Thermometer left in for 3-5 minutes Most common, convenient, comfortable way to take temperature Check for eating/drinking anything hot/cold exercising or smoking a cigarette 15 minutes prior

10 Rectal Temperature Taken in the rectum
Thermometer left in for 3-5 minutes Most accurate Insert 1-1 ½ inches, hold in place and screen patient for privacy

11 Axillary/Groin Temperature
Taken under the armpit or in the groin fold Thermometer left in for 8-10 minutes Least Accurate Dry armpit/groin, place in center and hold in place

12 Aural/Tympanic Temperature
- taken in the ear - measures the thermal infrared energy radiating from the blood vessels in the eardrum - position and ear wax can affect readings -left in until it beeps -temperature is calculated into an equivalent by mode

13 Temperature By Body Site
Oral Normal temp Normal Range Rectal Normal temp Normal Range Axillary/groin Normal temp Normal Range Tympanic Normal temp 98.6

14 Factors that Increase Temperature
Illness Infection Exercise Excitement High temps in the environment

15 Factors that Decrease Temperature
Starvation/fasting Sleep Decreased muscle activity Mouth breathing Exposure to cold temperatures Certain diseases

16 Temperature Conditions
Hyperthermia Increased body temp Body temp >104ºF >106 ºF will cause convulsions and death Fever temp over 101 ºF R Due to illness or injury

17 Temperature Conditions
Hypothermia Body temp below 96 ºF due to exposure to cold temperatures Depends on core temperature, age and length of exposure

18 Types of Clinical Thermometers
Slender glass tube containing mercury or colored fluid Types Oral – blue tip, long slender bulb, marked oral Security – plain tip Rectal – red tip, short stubby bulb, marked rectal

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20 Mercury Thermometers Not used now Colored column of red alcohol
Toxic to the body and environment Can be absorbed through the skin and inhaled as a vapor through the lungs Heavy metal that accumulates in the brain and causes mental retardation

21 Clean up Broken Mercury Thermometer
Use appropriate PPE’s Do not touch mercury Seal in a glass container Dispose according to regulations

22 Types of Thermometers Electronic
Can be used for oral, rectal, or axillary Blue probe for oral Red probe for rectal Disposable probe covers prevent cross-contamination

23 - used to record temperature in the ear
Tympanic - used to record temperature in the ear - Records temperature in 1-3 seconds

24 Positioning the Patients Ear for Tympanic temperature
Infants under 1 year Pull ear pinna straight back Infants over 1 year and adults Pull ear pinna straight back and down Positioning the pinna correctly straightens the auditory canal so the probe will point directly at the tympanic membrane

25 Reading Thermometers Digital thermometers -until you hear the beep
•Tympanic thermometers - hold in place for 2-3 seconds, remove and read

26 Reading a Glass Thermometer
Hold thermometer at eye level Find the column of mercury/red liquid Each long hash mark represents one degree Each short hash mark represents 2/10th of a degree Exception: long line at 986 ºF represent normal body temperature

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28 Charting a Temperature
Use a superscript to record 10th’s 102.2 should be written as 102.2 This avoids errors Use a TPR Chart Mark temp under correct date and time Indicate method of taking temperature - R - rectal - Ax – axillary - T - tympanic No abbreviation indicates an oral temp

29

30 Clean A Clinical Thermometer
Use warm water to clean and rinse Soak in a disinfecting solution such as alcohol for 20 minutes


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