Positioning (Pressure Injury Prevention and Tourniquet Safety) for Certified Perioperative Nurse (CNOR)
Included In This Lesson
Outline
Positioning (Pressure Injury Prevention and Tourniquet Safety)
Guidelines:
- Positioning patients is one of the most important tasks and is the responsibility of all members of the surgical team.
- Goals of patient positioning:
- Providing exposure of the surgical site
- Maintaining patient’s comfort and privacy
- Providing access to intravenous lines and monitoring equipment
- Allowing for optimal ventilation by maintaining a patent airway and avoiding constriction or pressure on the chest or
abdomen - Maintaining circulation and protecting muscles, nerves, and bony prominences, joints, skin, eyes, and vital organs from injury
- Observing and protecting fingers, toes, and genitals
- Stabilizing to prevent unintended shifting or movement
- Goals of pneumatic tourniquet:
- Obtain a near bloodless field during extremity surgeries
- Confine a bolus of intravenous regional anesthesia in an extremity
Considerations:
- Proper positioning and body alignment to prevent pressure injuries:
- SUPINE: the patient’s knees should be flexed approximately 5-10 degrees. The patient’s heels should be elevated off the underlying surface using a heel suspension device or a wide, pressure redistributing surface
- Prevents popliteal vein compression and reduces risk for DVT
- Don’t place pressure on Achilles tendon with heel-suspension
- TRENDELENBURG: Supine variation. Shortest time possible, minimize the degree of Trendelenburg position as much as possible
- Decreases the potential for complications or patient injury
- Retinal detachment and blindness may result from prolonged use of steep Trendelenburg position
- LITHOTOMY: shortest time possible, repositioned at established intervals during procedures
- The longer the patient’s legs are maintained in lithotomy, the greater the potential for developing neuropathy, neurovascular complication, or compartment syndrome
- PRONE: Shortest time possible. Patients in prone position should be positioned 5-10 degree reverse Trendelenburg, if possible.
- Intraocular pressure increases in the anesthetized patient in the prone position
- The magnitude of this increase is related to the amount of time spent in the prone position
- Positioning surgical patients with the head above the heart helps reduce venous congestion in the eye and orbit and decrease intraocular and intraorbital pressure
- SUPINE: the patient’s knees should be flexed approximately 5-10 degrees. The patient’s heels should be elevated off the underlying surface using a heel suspension device or a wide, pressure redistributing surface
- Pneumatic Tourniquet
- Some patient conditions increase risk for complications associated with pneumatic tourniquet use
- Diabetic neuropathy
- Previous revascularization
- Sickle cell anemia
- Severe infection
- History or current VTE
- High BMI
- Low preop Hemoglobin
- AV grafts or fistulas
- Peripheral vascular disease (PVD)
- Malignancy
- Open fracture
- Severe crushing injuries
- Severe scar tissue at cuff location
- Some patient conditions increase risk for complications associated with pneumatic tourniquet use
- IFU may specify contraindications for tourniquet use
- Assessment/Diagnosis/Outcome Identification
- Conduct preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative nursing assessments specific to patient positioning
- Understand the physiologic changes that occur during operative and invasive procedures
- Evaluating the patient’s risk for injury based on an assessment of identified needs and the planned operative or invasive procedure
- Anticipating the surgeon’s requirement for surgical access (site, laterality, etc)
- Respecting the patient’s individual positioning limitations
- Planning/Implementation/Evaluation
- Identify, select, use, and maintain positioning equipment and devices
- Use neurophysiological monitoring to identify and prevent potential positioning injuries
- Implement interventions to provide for patient’s comfort and safety and to protect the patient’s circulatory, respiratory, musculoskeletal, neurological, and integumentary structures
- Prophylactic dressing may be applied to bony prominences (heels, sacrum) or other areas subjected to pressure, friction, and shear
- Support the activities of the anesthesia professional
- Implement safe practices for positioning patients in the supine, Trendelenburg, prone, reverse Trendelenburg, lithotomy, sitting and semi-sitting, and lateral positions and modifications of these position
- Documenting patient positioning and positioning-related activities
- Include in team communication
- Follow manufacturer’s IFU and organization policies/procedures related to positioning and pneumatic tourniquet use in the OR
- Document care and be specific about positioning, padding, repositioning, evaluation, etc.
- Communicate positioning clearly and frequently to the interprofessional team. Include relevant information in handover reports. Include in briefing, time-out, debriefing as warranted.
- Report device or positioning related injuries
Pitfalls:
- Incorrect positioning and tourniquet application can result in serious injury
- Primary cause of pressure injuries is sustained cell and tissue deformation
- Surgical patients are at increased risk for positioning injury because of the effects of anesthesia and the lack of normal perception and protective reflexes
- Frequent re-evaluation and team communication is key to patient safety
Examples:
- Da Vinci’s Vitruvian Man
Linchpins (Key Points):
- The risk for injury is multifactorial and may be related to the patient’s condition as well as the position
- Many positioning injuries are associated with prolonged procedures
- Surgical positioning creates a risk for skin breakdown and pressure injury development
- Nursing interventions can prevent positioning injuries
Transcript
References
- Armstrong M. & Moore, R.A. (2022). Anatomy, Patient Positioning. StatPearls [Internet].
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK513320/ - Association of periOperative Registered Nurses (AORN): Guideline Essentials (website), 2022, https://www.aorn.org/guidelines-resources/guidelines-fo r-perioperative practice/guideline-essentials
- Rothrock, J. (2019). Alexander’s Care of the Patient in
Surgery (16th ed.). Elsevier Health Sciences.