Benefits And Drawbacks Of Surgical Drain Management

By Aimee Schwartz


Medical operations must be done meticulously and skillfully. There are equipment, and tools that work for one procedure but may not be applicable to the other. That is why skills, knowledge, and care should come together when it comes to applying processes to a patient. Practitioners should always realize that the lives of their patients rely on their hands.

Either mere examinations or intensive surgeries need tools and systems to help make the process more accurate and to achieve better results. Surgical drain management is one of the functions of both professionals and systems working together. Surgical drains are used to take away all the excess air and fluids from the body of the patient.

For the benefits, it helps in the accumulation of anastomotic leakage. This happens when there are too many fluids like blood, drains, and air in the body part of where surgery was performed. Other procedures where the system can be used are orthopedic processes, plastic surgery including breast augmentation, chest drainage, cyst surgeries, neurosurgery, catheter attachments, and a lot more.

Drains are classified according to passive or active, rubber or silastic, closed or open. Passives are those that do not have suction tubes and depend on pressure, while active has suctions that maintain suction pressures at either high or low levels. Rubbers have tract while silastics are inert. Then there is the open system using stoma or drain pads and the closed drains liquids to a bottle.

The system is removed only when it reaches around twenty five milliliters per day. Also, it can be totally removed by the time the wound heals. But it is also necessary to take out two centimeters a day of the drain. This gradual removal will be until they are sure that the wound will no longer cause infections. But the postoperative areas take longer which is about a week before removal.

For palliative care, the nurse or any medical practitioner should remove, pull, or shorten a drain as this could cause the patient discomfort. It is important that a pain reliever is in sight before the removal is done so that if the patient experiences pain, he or she will be relieved with the medicine. Then the practitioner will dress the part where the drain was taken out. A dry dressing will do. This is done especially when the wound has healed.

They must also carefully look into the guidelines from time to time in case there are very sensitive processes. Monitoring is an important so that they will know when to remove the tubes. Removing it means that the suction bags or bottles have reached a measurement of twenty five milliliters. They need to observe if the wound has healed yet or not. Otherwise, removing can be the cause of getting infections.

Operations in the gastrointestinal systems do not imply the use of drains because it can pose a threat to the patient. This is a sensitive part and it is much safer without this equipment. If the mechanical pressure is not properly controlled, there could be complications.

As much as possible, there should be no errors in performing operations using the system of drains. These are helpful in some surgical operations but may pose a threat to other types of sensitive procedures. Hence, palliative care must be observed all of the time.




About the Author:



Twitter Delicious Facebook Digg http://www.stumbleupon.com/stumbler/weightloss33 Favorites More

 
Design by Free WordPress Themes | Bloggerized by Lasantha - Premium Blogger Themes | Facebook Themes