What are the nursing interventions for bronchoscopy?

What are the nursing interventions for bronchoscopy?

The following are the nursing interventions during bronchoscopy:

  • Position the client. Place patient in a sitting or supine position and provide supplemental oxygen as ordered.
  • Provide assistance with the diagnostic procedure and/or treatment. Assist with tissue specimen collection for testing.
  • Secure specimen.

How do you prepare a patient for a bronchoscopy?

How to Prepare

  1. Don’t eat or drink after midnight on the night before your bronchoscopy.
  2. If you take medication daily, ask your doctor if you should take it on the day of the procedure.
  3. On the day of the procedure, you’ll be asked to remove your glasses, contact lenses, hearing aids, dentures, or removable bridges.

What is the best position of the patient after bronchoscopy?

The sitting position is a risk factor for oxygen decline, with a relative risk of 2.46. Conclusions: We recommend performing the procedure while the patient is in a supine position. We also recommend routine prophylactic low-flow supplemental oxygen in all patients undergoing bronchoscopy.

What should I do after bronchoscopy?

Activity

  1. Do not eat anything for 2 hours after the procedure.
  2. Rest when you feel tired. Getting enough sleep will help you recover.
  3. Avoid strenuous activities, such as bicycle riding, jogging, weight lifting, or aerobic exercise, until your doctor says it is okay.
  4. Ask your doctor when you can drive again.

What is the position for bronchoscopy?

Flexible bronchoscopy is usually performed with supine or semi-recumbent position. However, which of patient posture is effective is not clear. Supine position during bronchoscopy can cause massive aspirates of oral secretion. It can cause complications like hypoxia and post bronchoscopy pneumonia.

What is the bronchoscopy procedure?

Bronchoscopy is a procedure to look directly at the airways in the lungs using a thin, lighted tube (bronchoscope). The bronchoscope is put in the nose or mouth. It is moved down the throat and windpipe (trachea), and into the airways.

What are the contraindications of bronchoscopy?

Contraindications

  • Acute respiratory failure with hypercapnia (unless the patient is intubated and ventilated)
  • High-grade tracheal obstruction.
  • Inability to adequately oxygenate the patient during the procedure.
  • Untreatable life-threatening arrhythmias.

When can I eat after a bronchoscopy?

You should not eat or drink anything for two hours after the bronchoscopy because your throat will still be numb. You will need somebody to accompany you home and to stay with you for 24 hours until the effects have fully worn off. Most people feel able to resume normal activities after 24 hours.

Can you be awake during bronchoscopy?

If your doctor is using a rigid bronchoscope, you’ll probably receive general anesthesia and will be asleep during the procedure. If you stayed awake during the bronchoscopy, you’ll have a chance to rest after the procedure.

What is a bronchoscopy with biopsy?

During bronchoscopy, a doctor may collect a small piece of tissue from either the lung or a nearby lymph node. The interventional pulmonologist can use a needle or forceps advanced through the bronchoscope to get a sample of tissue. Biopsies can detect cancer, infection, sarcoidosis, and other conditions.

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