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Avoiding Common Surgical Errors Lisa Marcucci

Avoiding Common Surgical Errors By Lisa Marcucci

Avoiding Common Surgical Errors by Lisa Marcucci


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Summary

Lists 186 errors commonly made by attendings, residents, interns, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants when working with surgical patients on the ward or in the operating room, emergency room, or intensive care unit. This book explains each entry which includes an explanation of the clinical scenario in which the error can occur.

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Avoiding Common Surgical Errors Summary

Avoiding Common Surgical Errors by Lisa Marcucci

This pocket book lists 186 errors commonly made by attendings, residents, interns, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants when working with surgical patients on the ward or in the operating room, emergency room, or intensive care unit. The book can easily be read immediately before the start of a rotation or used for quick reference on call.

Each entry includes an explanation of the clinical scenario in which the error can occur and the relevant anatomy and pathophysiology. Illustrations of pertinent anatomy, instruments, and devices are included.

Table of Contents

  1. Tube, Drain, Line, and Catheter Snafus
  2. Emergency Room Snafus
  3. Operating Room Snafus
  4. Ward Snafus
  5. Laboratory Snafus
  6. Medication Snafus
  7. Surgical Subspecialty Snafus
  8. Miscellaneous Snafus
  9. Have a high index of suspicion for incarcerated or strangulated hernia if a patient has a bowel obstruction and no previous abdominal surgery
  10. Consider aortic injury or thoracic great vessel injury if a patient has fractures of the first or second ribs
  11. Evaluate the patient for mediastinal or heart injuries if a sternal fracture is present
  12. Admit a knee dislocation for observation if an arteriogram is not performed to rule out popliteal artery injury
  13. Have a high index of suspicion for nerve injures in humeral fractures and dislocations
  14. Look for a rupturing or dissecting aneurysm with any patient who complains of flank pain
  15. Make the opening sufficiently wide to adequately drain and pack the cavity when performing an incision and drainage of an abscess
  16. Promptly dispose of your own sharps after doing a bedside or emergency room procedure
  17. Close the galea as a separate layer when repairing a full thickness laceration to the scalp.
  18. Treat crepitus on physical exam as a surgical emergency that requires definitive debridement in the operating room
  19. Do not shave the eyebrow when repairing a laceration to this area
  20. Do not rule out intraabdominal trauma by clinical exam if the patient is intoxicated or has altered sensorium
  21. Do not allow a negative CT to prevent you from taking a case of suspected appendicitis to the operating room if the diagnosis is supported clinically
  22. Do not remove a knife that is penetrating tissue unless you have a direct intraoperative vision and control
  23. Avoid undue traction on the left renal vein to expose the neck of an aortic aneurysm
  24. Do not hesitate to convert a laparoscopic cholecystectomy to an open cholecystectomy
  25. Use the left side when harvesting a full-thickness skin graft from the groin area or lower abdomen
  26. Remember when reviewing Doppler ultrasound results that the superficial femoral vein is a component of the deep venous system
  27. Consider gastric dilatation when a patient is having respiratory difficulty
  28. Do not debride a dry/black eschar overlying a decubitus ulcer in a bedridden patient that has no evidence of underlying cellulitis
  29. Consider an addisonian state if it looks like sepsis and smells like sepsis but you can not identify a causative microbe.
  30. Go above the rib when placing a chest tube or needle into the chest cavity
  31. Prescribe Lactobacillus (or other probiotic therapy) when a patient receives any dose of antibiotics
  32. Make sure the heparin is removed from the intravenous flushes if a patient is diagnosed with heparin-induced thrombocytopenia
  33. Obtain a pregnancy test on every female between the ages of ten and fifty years.
  34. Do not call the anesthesiologists or nurse anesthetists anesthesia or Dr. Anesthesia

Additional information

CIN0781747422G
9780781747424
0781747422
Avoiding Common Surgical Errors by Lisa Marcucci
Used - Good
Paperback
Lippincott Williams and Wilkins
2005-10-05
528
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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