Lesson 1Pain assessment and multimodal analgesia planning specific to laparoscopic cholecystectomyThis focuses on planned pain check after keyhole gall bladder removal, choice of many-way pain stop, telling inside, body, and shoulder pain apart, and safe strong and non-strong drug use for comfort and healing.
Proven pain scales and recordingUsual pain ways after keyhole gallStrong drug choice, dose, and adjustNon-strong and area pain stop choicesHandling strong drug side effects in recoveryLesson 2Monitoring for anesthesia emergence issues: nausea, vomiting, shivering, deliriumThis talks about watching for common sleep drug wake issues like sick feeling, throwing up, shaking, and confusion, including risk factors, check tools, and proven drug and non-drug helps.
Risk factors for after surgery sick in recoveryCheck and treat shakingSeeing wake upsetDrug handling waysNon-drug comfort and safety stepsLesson 3Safe transfer and mobilization criteria from PACU to wardThis sets safe rules for move and early move from recovery to ward, including blood flow steady, pain control, breath enough, and nurse tasks in prepping, teaching, and safe patient move.
Body steady needsPain and sick control before moveBreath and breathing path safety rulesFall risk and move warningsPatient teaching before ward moveLesson 4Documentation and handoff from PACU to ward: required elements and timingThis details key parts of recovery record and planned pass to ward, including checks, helps, drugs, and steady rules, stressing time, clearness, and use of standard talk tools.
Needed recovery check recordsDrug and fluid give summaryUse of SBAR or like pass toolsSteady and move ready rulesLaw and quality record partsLesson 5Primary survey on arrival: airway patency, respiratory rate and oxygenation, need for supplemental oxygenThis covers planned first check on recovery come, focusing on breathing path open, breath state, oxygen goals, and safe extra oxygen and helps use to stop low oxygen and breathing path trouble in after-sleep patients.
Breathing path open and block signsBreath rate, way, and workFinger oxygen and full oxygen goalsSigns for extra oxygen giveUse of mouth and nose breathing helps in recoveryLesson 6Wound and port site inspection: hemorrhage, drainage, dressing evaluationThis covers planned look at keyhole port places and cuts, seeing bleed, lump, or gall leak, checking covers and drains, and recording findings to guide quick surgery or nurse helps.
Look at port places and cutsSigns of active bleed or lumpCheck of drain and gall leakCover strength and addRecording and raising issuesLesson 7Urine output monitoring and renal considerations for CKD patientsThis handles urine amount watch in recovery, understanding low urine, fluid state check, and special kidney thinks for long kidney illness patients, including drug dose and stop harm-to-kidney things.
Expected urine amount and limitsChecking amount state and blood reachSpecial issues in long kidney and dialyze patientsChanging fluids and kidney-harm drugsAnswering to sudden low urine in recoveryLesson 8Neurologic and mental status checks: orientation, sedation scales, pain vs deliriumThis explores nerve and mind state check, including awake level, where and when know, calm scales, and telling pain, low oxygen, or confusion apart, for early see of nerve or sleep-related problems.
Awake level and where-when checksUse of standard calm scalesScreen for wake confusionTelling pain, worry, and confusion apartCheck of move and feel workLesson 9Blood glucose monitoring and insulin correction protocols in PACUThis explains blood sugar watch in recovery, goal ranges for surgery patients, see and treat low and high sugar, and safe insulin fix rules, special in sugar or high-risk people.
Signs for recovery sugar checksGoal sugar ranges after surgerySee low sugar signsInsulin fix scale useStop bounce bad sugarLesson 10Circulation assessment: heart rate, blood pressure, peripheral perfusion, continuous monitoringThis reviews blood flow check in recovery, including heart beat, blood pressure, rhythm, and edge blood reach, with focus on steady watch, early see of bleed, shock, or wrong beats, and quick nurse helps.
Starting life signs and trend seeNon-cut and cut blood pressure watchEdge blood reach and small blood refillSeeing after surgery bleed or shockAnswering to wrong beats in recovery