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Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolinas
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Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

Dec 14, 2015

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Page 1: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

Why you do what you do?

Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTCOrgan Recovery CoordinatorLifeShare Of The Carolinas

Page 2: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

Why is my dead patient so busy???

Page 3: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

Demanding Organ Recovery Coordinator

• We expect a lot in the first few hours so optimal staffing is one on one!

• Keep your daggers in your pocket please!!

• Usually after the first few hours things will slow down.

Page 4: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

How many lines do you really need?

• You will be grateful for the central line when you see the amount of labs tubes we need. And no they will not need a blood transfusion

• Ton of medications, most likely blood pressure support in the early stages, so that central line is again very handy!

• Respiratory Therapy will love me for the arterial line I will have to have! If we pursue lungs, TONS of ABG’s!

Page 5: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

LifeShare Orders• Admit and readmit

• Labs for baseline references

• Chest Xrays, possible implementation of lung protocol, possibly CT scan

• EKG, possibly ECHO and Cath Lab

• Tons of medications and fluid changes

Page 6: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

They were stable before death, what happened?

Page 7: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

Physiologically speaking!

• No Hypothalamus, therefore no thyroid hormones

• No ADH • No temperature control • No blood sugar control• No parasympathetic response systems,

causing cardiovascular dilation • Little to no BP and HR control

Page 8: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

No Hypothalamus, NEED Thyroid Fix

• Levothyroxine=T4; Bolus then start a drip

• D50 amp• 20 units Regular Insulin• 2 Grams Solumedrol

ALL MUST BE GIVEN CLOSE TOGETHER!!!!

Page 9: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

DIABETES INSIPIDUS

No Hypothalamus + No ADH = Loss of free water and sodium

increase

Page 10: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

Diabetes Insipidus Fix

• Hourly I&O• If UOP exceeds 800ml/hr, need

ADH-Vasopressin, Goal UOP 150-300 ml/hr

• Urine Replacement ml:ml hourly• Low Sodium fluids• Replace electrolytes• Monitor CVP, BP and HR

Page 11: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

No more sugar for me please!

• Blood sugar check q2hr• Bolus insulin or even start a drip• Look out for increased UOP, may

indicate an elevated blood sugar!!

Page 12: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

It’s getting hot in here!

Goal temp 96.8-99.5Cold = warm blankets to body and head, warm

circuit to ventilator, warm fluids and/or bair hugger, turn up the thermostat!

Hot = remove blankets, cooling blanket, ice packs and turn down thermostat!

Just gets you ready for menopause

Page 13: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

Who turned the lytes out?

Prior to brain death medical management can lead to challenges

• Mannitol/diuretics to reduce swelling• IVF fluid restriction to avoid pulmonary

edema or CHF• DI• Excessive blood due to trauma or

coagulopathy

Page 14: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

Please fix the Lytes!• Replace K+• Replace Phos if <2.5• Reduce Na, monitor IVF for Na• If NA <130, consider 3%• CaCl or Ca Gluconate for cardiac

function• Monitor q4hr and check q1hr after

any replacements

Page 15: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

Complication: DIC• Common with head trauma-GSW, Open

head injuries, closed head trauma’s

• Concern with organ donor-clotting of vascular system causes necrosis or organs

PTT< 38PT< 15Platelets >65,000Fibrinogen >100,000

Page 16: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

How do you fix it?• Observe for any bleeding

• Monitor coags

• Use PRBC’s, FFP, cryoprecipitate

• Treatment will not cure but will slow process

Page 17: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

BP, it’s up, it’s down!

No parasympathetic or sympathetic responsesIt’s UP

• Treat with Labetalol or Nipride

It’s Down• Treat with Dopamine, Levothyroxine, Neosynephrine, Levophed, Albumin 5%, IVF

boluses dependent on lytes and CVP

Page 18: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

Now for the CVP of SVV!!

• Monitor Hydration• Consider albumin of Na up• Tricky if placing lungs, need

hydration for kidneys, dry for lungs!

Page 19: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

If that was not enough, what about the pH?

• No respiratory drive, need to know if metabolic acidosis or alkalosis

• Keep pH and pCO2 normal• Acidosis most common, collaborate with RT,

may need NaHCO3• Monitor TV and FiO2• ABG’s q2-4, hours• HOB up • Rotate and percuss• Suction

Page 20: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

Two Sides to the Story

• Primary goal is to return the organ function back to baseline to optimize for placement

• Ideally this will make the transplant as easy as possible for the recipient

Page 21: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

Mathematically Speaking…..

Collaboration

Nurse + MD + LifeShare ORC = Organ Recovery

Organ Recovery + Transplant = Recipient

Page 22: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

GO TEAM!

Page 23: Why you do what you do? Nikki Dotson-Lorello RN, BSN, CCRN, CPTC Organ Recovery Coordinator LifeShare Of The Carolina s.

Questions??