Esophageal Varices for Certified Emergency Nursing (CEN)

You're watching a preview. 300,000+ students are watching the full lesson.
Master
To Master a topic you must score > 80% on the lesson quiz.
Take Quiz

Included In This Lesson

NURSING.com students have a 99.25% NCLEX pass rate.

Outline

Esophageal Varices

 

Definition/Etiology:

Dilated submucosal esophageal veins that become tortured leading to an increased risk of rupture

Causes:

  • Liver disease
  • Cirrhosis = (scarring of the liver)
  • Portal HTN = (portal vein is the main vein that runs to the liver. More scarring = increased pressure)

 

Pathophysiology:

Liver scarring causes increased pressure in the vein, vein travels to the path of least resistance which is usually the esophageal veins. Pressure increases in the esophageal veins leading to dilation and potentially rupture.

 

Clinical Presentation:

  • Vomiting blood
  • Abd pain
  • Possible Jaundice
  • Hx of alcoholism or liver disease
  • Black/ tar like stool from swallowing small amt of blood
  • If they have been bleeding, patient shows shock symptoms:
    • tachycardia
    • low BP
    • pale/clammy skin
    • irregular breathing

 

Collaborative Management:

  • Stabilize
  • Hypovolemic shock
  • Fluids
  • Blood transfusion (make sure type and cross completed)

 

  • Labs – may show anemia, dehydration, elevated AST/ALT, thrombocytopenia
  • Treatment – Upper endoscopy, band ligation, monitor BP to prevent rebleeding (vasoconstrictors as needed)

 

Evaluation | Patient Monitoring | Education:

  • Hemodynamic monitoring
  • 70% chance of rebleeding, monitor for additional bleeding
  • Need good outpatient follow up
  • If they abuse ETOH/ avoid any further use

 

Linchpins: (Key Points)

  • Caused from portal HTN
  • Monitor for hypovolemic shock
  • Esophageal band ligation
  • Rebleed likely
  • Rupture = patient can go into hypovolemic shock/ bleed out

Unlock the Complete Study System

Used by 300,000+ nursing students. 99.25% NCLEX pass rate.

200% NCLEX Pass Guarantee.
No Contract. Cancel Anytime.

Transcript

For more great CEN prep, got to the link below to purchase the “Emergency Nursing Examination Review” book by Dr. Laura Gasparis Vonfrolio RN, PHD
https://greatnurses.com/

References:

Study Faster with Full Video Transcripts

99.25% NCLEX Pass Rate vs 88.8% National Average

200% NCLEX Pass Guarantee.
No Contract. Cancel Anytime.