Remember Me
forgot your password?

Nursing Considerations of Peripheral Vascular Disease-diabetes

Your nursing interventions should focus on providing foot care, monitoring your patient's response to the prescribed drugs and promoting circulation after surgery.

Foot Care

The primary goal of nursing care in patients with diabetes and peripheral vascular disease is to help reduce the risk of foot and leg amputations. Therefore, protect the patient's legs and feet from even minor traumas, which can lead to infection, ulcers, and ultimately loss of function.

Thoroughly assess your patient's legs and feet for signs of impaired skin integrity, such as pressure areas or skin tears. If your patient has peripheral or autonomic neuropathy, she may have decreased sensations of touch, pain, or temperature, so examine her legs and feet routinely for signs of breakdown. Check her pedal pulses, foot temperature, capillary refill, and skin color. Also, assess her for changes in feeling, such as numbness or tingling.

Provide your patient with meticulous foot care. To prevent pressure on her legs and feet, make sure she changes position every 2 hours and performs range-of-motion exercises, if possible. Wash her feet with warm water and mild soap, and dry them well, particularly between the toes. Inspect her feet and apply moisturizing cream every day but not between her toes. Use protective padding, foot cradles, or an alternating-pressure mattress to reduce the risk of pressure injuries. To prevent constriction and impaired circulation, don't use elastic antiembolism stockings.

Although your patient's activity may be restricted, make sure she wears appropriate foot­wear, even for short distances. Shoes or slippers that don't fit properly can cause further injury and lengthen her hospital stay.

Monitor your patient for signs and symptoms of wound infection, including redness, swelling, or foul-smelling, purulent drainage. Obtain a culture of any open or draining lesion, and begin antibiotic therapy as prescribed. If your patient is taking antibiotics, make sure she drinks at least eight 8-ounce glasses of fluid every day, and assess her renal function daily. Dress an infected wound with a wet-to-dry dressing and change it several times a day to achieve mechanical debridement. (Remember that the dressing helps lift off dead surface skin, which promotes new tissue growth.) If the wound isn't infected, dress it with an occlusive dressing that retains moisture and enhances cell migration and healing.

Drug Response

If your patient is taking pentoxifylline, check for headaches, dizziness, nausea, or vomiting. Monitor her WBC count for signs of neutropenia. If she's taking ticlopidine, closely monitor her complete blood cell count and WBC differential for adverse effects, such as neutropenia. Also, evaluate her liver function tests for elevated alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase levels, which indicate liver dysfunction.

Postoperative Circulation

If your patient has a bypass graft, your primary goal after surgery is to promote and maintain circulation through the new grafts. So monitor the neurovascular status of her feet and legs. Immediately report signs or symptoms of graft occlusion, such as severe pain, loss of pulses, cold hands or feet, or new complaints of numbness or tingling.

Position your patient so that her knees aren't flexed, which might impair her circulation and compromise the patency of the graft. Also, make sure she doesn't sit in one position for a long period. Elevate the affected leg to reduce edema. Instruct her not to cross her legs and to avoid keeping the affected leg in a dependent position for a prolonged period.

Robert Baird

Read more about diabetes symptoms, diabetes diet, and also about diseases.

Rate this Article: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s)
Print Email Re-Publish

Add new Comment



Captcha

  • Latest Health Articles
  • More from Robert Baird

Burn Fat Quick Eating Healthy Here Are The Rules

By: Joe Gagliano | 21/12/2009
Fat Burning - The Healthy Eating Rules "There is no better time than now. The time to live is now. The time to dream is now. The time to imagine and forget the past is now. The time to shine is now. The time to bleed, sweat, and determine yourself for...

Washington Alcohol And Drug Rehab Residential Treatment Facilities

By: Amit Chakraborty | 21/12/2009
Unfortunately for people who are addicted to drugs or alcohol, they feel like they are the only ones who feel their pain that they are the ones that suffer; it isn’t that they are being selfish, it is that their addiction is stronger than they are, and their addiction tells them horrible things to keep them addicted.

Detox foot spa treatment enhances both health and longevity

By: Mark Bevan | 21/12/2009
Detox foot spa has become a popular method of eliminating toxins from the body. Though our body has its own detoxification mechanism, it may not function normally because of increased amount of pollutants in the environment. A detox foot spa can help to get rid of the toxins from your body. You’ll therefore feel healthier and live much longer.

The yogic path towards attainment of Moksha

By: Karan Khalsa | 21/12/2009
This article discusses about the way of attainment of Moksha by practicing Yoga. It also talks about the importance of music in Yoga.

Natural Approach to Handling Acne

By: John Don | 21/12/2009
To feel your best it's important to try and look your best. Someone's confidence in the way they look can give an obvious positive effect on their lives. People who look good and feel good are more likely to succeed, and are less likely to have knock-backs. People who suffer from...

Artificial Sweeteners:Sugar free but not risk free

By: Medimanage | 21/12/2009
Ok, we give you that you only know about the Artificial Sweetener through the ads on TV with Bipasha Basu swearing by them or Sanjeev Kapoor recommending them; but if you are taking them in place of sugar for weight loss or because you are a diabetic; then you better know what they contain..

Home Remedies for a Diabetic

By: Medimanage | 21/12/2009
The moment one is pronounced to have diabetes, long lists of medicines and an even longer list of do’s and don’ts show up. And then a diabetic is expected to be careful about what he/she eats, to control blood sugar levels, to get regular check-ups done and to indulge mild workouts. But along with these, there are certain basic home remedies which a diabetic must adhere to, in order to keep diabetes under control.

Fruit Juices are only half good!

By: Medimanage | 21/12/2009
Why? Just rewind to how you squeeze the juice out of the fruit. You take 3-4 fruits, peeled even cut into pieces, put it into the grinder, squeeze the juice, add a bit of sugar or even salt. Now you filter and pour it into a glass. You might consume it there and then or just keep it and have it after some time.

Earlier Study Lends Support

By: Robert Baird | 06/05/2008 | Wellness
Earlier research supports this positive outlook. A study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association reported that 40 percent of people studied (who had been taking drugs for years to keep their numbers down) were able to control their blood pressure with dietary changes and moderate exercise alone.

Cut Your Cholesterol a New and Simple Plan

By: Robert Baird | 06/05/2008 | Health
Mirror, mirror on the wall, What risks heart disease most of all-high blood pressure or high cholesterol, lack of exercise or too much stress, Type A behavior or a fatty diet, family history or cigarettes? If scientists had the answer, heart disease might not still be our number one killer. In fact, heart disease comes at us from many directions

Countdown to Lower Blood Pressure

By: Robert Baird | 06/05/2008 | Health
If you thought that drugs with their unwanted side effects were the only way to control high blood pressure, think again. Studies show that a sizable number of people with mild hypertension can get their pressure dropped with out drugs.

Margarine Takes the Lead

By: Robert Baird | 02/05/2008 | Diseases & Conditions
Now that's been reversed. U. S. Department of Agriculture statistics cited by Ehrhart show that in 1987, Americans averaged 10.5 pounds of margarine and 4.6 pounds of butter.

Halibut With Roasted Garlic and Wild Mushrooms

By: Robert Baird | 02/05/2008 | Medicine
Roast the garlic bulb at 400°F for 10 to 15 minutes. Break the bulb into cloves. Peel three of the cloves, chop, and place in a medium bowl. (Reserve the remainder for another use.) Add the vinegar, water, and shallots.

Asthma - Diseases

By: Robert Baird | 02/05/2008 | Diseases & Conditions
Asthma is a chronic condition marked by periodic attacks of wheezing and difficulty in breathing.

Marinated Cheese Buttons

By: Robert Baird | 10/04/2008 | Diseases & Conditions
In a 9 inch glass pie plate, whisk together the vinegar, stock, oil, oregano, basil or thyme, mustard, and pepper.

Amazing Yogurt Cheese

By: Robert Baird | 09/04/2008 | Diseases & Conditions
What's lusciously smooth and creamy, with only a fraction of cream cheese's calories and none of its fat? Yogurt cheese.

Submit Your Articles Free: Signup
Article Categories




Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the Terms Of Use and Privacy Policy | User published content is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Copyright © 2005-2008 Free Articles by ArticlesBase.com, All rights reserved. (0.32, 5, w3)