Stroke Case Study (45 min)

Included In This Lesson
Study Tools For Stroke Case Study (45 min)
Outline
Mrs. Blossom is a 57-year-old female who presented to the Emergency Room with new onset Atrial Fibrillation with Rapid Ventricular Response (RVR). She is admitted to the cardiac telemetry unit after being converted to normal sinus rhythm with a calcium channel blocker (diltiazem). When you enter the room to assess Mrs. Blossom, her daughter looks at you concerned and says “mom’s acting kinda funny.”
What nursing assessments should be completed at this time?
You assess Mrs. Blossom to find she has a left sided facial droop, slurred speech, and is unable to hold her left arm up for more than 3 seconds.
What is/are your priority nursing action(s) at this time?
What may be occurring in Mrs. Blossom?
You call a Code Stroke and notify the charge nurse for help. You obtain suction to have at bedside just in case. The neurologist arrives at bedside within 7 minutes to assess Mrs. Blossom. He notes her NIH Stroke Scale score is 32. He orders a STAT CT scan, which shows there is no obvious bleed in the brain.
What are the possible interventions for Mrs. Blossom at this time?
What are the contraindications for thrombolytics like tPA (alteplase)?
You administer tPA per protocol, initiate q15min vital signs and neuro checks. You stay with the patient to continue to monitor her symptoms.
What are possible complications of tPA administration? What should you monitor for?
After 2 hours, Mrs. Blossom is showing signs of improvement. She is able to speak more clearly, though with a slight slur. She is still slightly weak on the left side, but is able to hold her arm up for 10 seconds now. Her NIHSS is now 6. Mrs. Blossom’s daughter asks you why this happened.
What would you explain has happened to Mrs. Blossom physiologically?
Two days later, Mrs. Blossom has recovered fully. She will be discharged today on Clopidogrel and Aspirin, plus a calcium channel blocker, with a follow up appointment in 1 week to see the neurologist.
What education topics should be included in the discharge teaching for Mrs. Blossom and her family?
Nursing Case Studies
This nursing case study course is designed to help nursing students build critical thinking. Each case study was written by experienced nurses with first hand knowledge of the “real-world” disease process. To help you increase your nursing clinical judgement (critical thinking), each case study includes answers laid out by Blooms Taxonomy to help you see that you are progressing to clinical analysis.
We encourage you to read the case study and really through the “critical thinking checks” as this is where the real learning occurs. If you get tripped up by a specific question, no worries, just dig into an associated lesson on the topic and reinforce your understanding. In the end, that is what nursing case studies are all about – growing in your clinical judgement.