Critical Thinking Incident: A Patient Kidney Failure

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CRITICAL THINKING INCIDENT Problem In order to be able to treat the dehydration that the patient came in with, the doctors put the patient on normal saline to raise the fluid levels. The patient ended up with fluid overload. The patient came in with dehydration and within the hospital stay acquired fluid overload, how did this happen? Background information An 85 year old female was admitted to the hospital due to a fall. The patient was diagnosed with Rhabdomylosis syncope, which is the breakdown of muscle fibers which leads to kidney damage (Rhabdomyolysis - PubMed Health). Patient has a past medical history of Wegener’s granulomatosis, which is a disorder in which blood vessels become inflamed, making it hard for blood to flow (Wegener’s granulomatosis - PubMed Health). The patient also has a past medical history of Atrial Fibrillation, glaucoma, hypothyroidism, pain in the thoracic spine, and confusion. The patient had a past cataract surgery. Upon assessment the patient had a total output of 320 mL. The patient had generalized edema and seemed to have gained weight. The patient showed signs of restlessness and change in mental status. Lab values significant to this care problem: • High WBC 11.0 (normal: 3.8-10.5 K/uL) • Low Hemoglobin 10.3 (normal: 13-17g/dL) • Low Hematocrit 31.8 (normal: 39-50 %) • Low RBC 3.63 (normal: 4.2-5.8 M/uL) • High BUN 26.0 (normal; 7-23 mg/dL) • High Creatine Kinase702 (normal: 60-400 IU/L) • High Sodium 160 (normal: 135-145 mEq/L) Medications: • Latanoprost (Xalatan): Treats ocular hypertension and open-angle glaucoma • Levothyroxine (Synthroid): Treats hypothyroidism and to prevent goiter. • Iosartan (Cozaar): it’s an Angiotensin II and is a potent vasoconstrictor • Spironolacton... ... middle of paper ... ...n assessing the patient’s lungs I did not see or hear any form of respiratory problems. The patient did not have any shortness of breath (dyspnea). The patient did not have a persistent cough or any form of wheezing. Usually in patients with heart problems they have an increase need to urinate at night, which the patient did not need to. The patient did not show any signs of chest pain which is another sign of CHF and HF. Because the patient did not show the main signs of heart problems I was able to rule out fluid overload due to heart problems. All-in-all patients may receive fluid overload for many reasons. The three main reasons why one may develop fluid overload is because of large volume of intravenous fluids, cardiac problems, or kidney failure. In my patients case the main reason as to why she developed fluid overload was because of kidney failure.

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