JohnO-1610-3
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- Serotonin and endorphins are morphine-like substances activated by pain and stress
- Sources of stress of older adults
-
* rapid environmental changes that require immediate reaction
* changes in lifestyle resulting from retirement or physical incapacity
* acute or chronic illness
* loss of significant others
* financial hardships
* relocation -
Any cellular damage caused by _____, _____, _____, or _____ stimuli results in the realease of pain producing substances.
Mechanical - stretching of soft body tissues (ex. passing a kidney stone)
Chemical - perforated visceral organ -
thermal,
mechanical,
chemical,
electrical - Hispanic Americans
-
* Fastest growing cohort in USA
* Expected to be largest minority
* High birth rates
* Major issue - lack of citizenship is a barrier to availability of services
* Family is most significant social organization
* Family needs prevail over individual needs
* Dishonor and shame reflect on whole family
* Tend not to seek help from outsiders
* Father is dominant
* Strong sense of MACHISMO
* Belief in external LOCUS
* Good health implies proper balance
* Folk medicine / healers are usually female - Culture aspects of dealing with death
-
1 - People want to die with dignity (in all cultures)
2 - Cultural and religious traditions help people cope with death
3 - Nurses are often present at time of death
4 - knowledge of patent's religious and cultural background helps nurses provide individualized care to patient and family
5 - dying alone is usually unacceptable in all cultures
6 - Some cultures - dying at home is preferable
7 - Some cultures patient should know what's going on, others don't feel patient should know what's going on
8 - Nurses need to know who to call and when
9 - Organ donation, autopsies, cremation, preparation of the body
10 - Rituals - Four categories of old
-
* Young Old = 65-74
* Middle Old = 75-84
* Old Old = 85-99
* Elite Old = 100+ -
"Reception Substances" released by the body include -
* Histamine
* Bradykinin
* Potassium
These combine with receptor sites.
Not all tissues contain receptors that transmit pain signals, ex. Brain and alveoli. -
* Histamine
* Bradykinin
* Potassium
These combine with receptor sites. - Characteristics of Intimacy (Stage 6)
-
- Need for marital intimacy
- Possessing capacity to love and express that love
- Involvement with other generations in family
- Maintaining a sense of self -
KNOW -
Even with acceptance hope is still present and needs to be supported realistically -
Erikson's Stage 6 - Young Adulthood
? vs ?
Main Issue? -
Intimacy vs. Isolation
Primary issue is love.
- Mechanical
- stretching of soft body tissues (ex. passing a kidney stone)
- Implementing the following nursing interventions for all patients regardless of risk -
-
* Monitor the patient's activities and behavior as often as possible, preferably every 30 to 60 minutes
* Remind the patient to call for help
* Help the patient to get out of bed or chair
* Provided, or remind the patient to use, walking devices
* Remind the patient to wear glasses
* Toilet the incontinent every 1 to 2 hours
* Clean up spills immediately
* Arrange furniture accordingly
* Provide adequate lighting
* Observe for side effects
* Orient the patient to the environment
* Keep the call light within reach
* Place the bed in lowest position with the brakes locked
* Place objects within reach
* Ensure adequate handrails
* Have physical therapies assess the patient for mobility and safety - Apnea =
- not breathing
- Age-related changes that can potentially affect drug absorption from an oral route include -
-
* an increasing gastric pH
* a decrease in gastric blood flow
* a decrease in gastrointestinal motility -
If pain is severe, or deep, typically involving visceral organs, the _____ nervous system goes into action
-
parasympathetic
-
Erikson's Stage 7 (Adulthood) -
? vs. ?
Primary Issue -
Generativity vs. Self-absorption/Stagnation
Primary issue is CARE - Caring
-
The essence of nursing is caring.
The dominant distinctive and unifying feature of nursing is caring.
1 - supportive and assistive acts for another individual
2 - Serves to improve human conditions
3 - Essential to human development, growth, and survival
4 - Caring behaviors include -
* comfort
* compassion
* concern
* empathy
* involvement
* love
* nurturance
* sharing
* support
* tenderness
* touch
* trust -
Erikson's Stage 8 (Old Age)
? vs. ?
Primary Issue? -
Integrity vs. Despair
Primary Issue = Wisdom - Pain is influenced by interaction between ...
- emotional, behavioral, cotnitive and physiologic sensory factors
- Age-related changes affecting metabolism include -
-
* a decrease in liver size
* a decrease in liver blood flow
* a decrease in liver enzyme activity -
Kubler-Ross
-
1 - Denial - may be partial or complete; may occur during first stages of illness and later on from time to time. (Used as a buffer zone - allowing time to deal with)
2 - Anger
- r/t giving up life
- may be projected at others
3 - Bargaining
4 - Depression
- Two kinds
- Preparatory (with impending loss)
- Reactive (reaction to the news just received)
5 - Acceptance - Three most common cognitive problems among older adults
-
1 - depression
2 - dementia
3 - delirium - Chemical
- perforated visceral organ (ex. burst appendix, duodenal ulcer). Chemical secretions touch sensitive nerve endings.
- Two forms of competence -
-
1 - Legally competent
2 - Clinically competent - Serotonin and endorphins are found in the ...
- brain, spinal cord, and GI tract
- Depression is thought to result from a lack of what two neurotransmitters?
-
norepinephrine
serotonin - Thermal (hot or cold)
-
causing inflammatin or loss of superficial layers of epidermis. Increased sensitivity of nerve endings.
- Characteristics of Despair
-
Despair = sense of hopelessness and dread
- Overwhelming regret over past mistake
- Worry about the future and unknown
- Feelings of loneliness and possible abandonment
Sense of not being missed when dead - Influences -
-
* Personal Values/Beliefs
* Life Review
* Family and friends reactions/attitudes
* Personal coping skills
* Health care staff - Define Cultural Competence
-
ability to understand and respond effectively to the cultural and language needs of patients.
- Respect the culture
- Be careful of discrimination
- Resources/protocol to address cross cultural legal and ethical conflicts - Gate Control Theory of Pain -
- Pain impulses can be regulated or blocked by the gating mechanism along CNS. Pain impulses pass through when the gate is open and not while the gate is closed.
- Characteristics of Integrity
-
Integrity = sense of satisfaction and fulfillment
- Knowledge developed from life experiences
- Ability to use all resilience and toughness learned
- Willingness to learn new coping skills
- Sense of humor
- Hospice
-
1 - specialized care for the dying including emotional and spiritual support
2 - may alleviate a lot of stress for family
3 - hospice personnel are educated to treat pain aggressively
4 - Hospice philosophy is as pain-free as possible and as alert as possible
5 - Doctor says that patient is less than six months - Characteristics of Stagnation
-
Stagnation
- Little involvement in adulthood activities
- Regret over putting aside personal interests for family
- Difficulty expressing feelings of affection
Lack of concern for family, country and mankind - Threshold of pain =
- minimum level of stimulus intensity required to evoke a nervous impulse
- Without treatment, depression may result in ?
-
1 - worsening medical condition
2 - risk of physical illness
3 - alcoholism
4 - increased pain and disability
5 - delayed recovery from illness
6 - suicide - Pain Pathways
-
1 - Source of pain
2 - Stimulation of pain receptor (may be mechanical, chemical, thermal, electric, or ischemic)
3 - Sensation travels along the sensory pathways and ascends the spinal cord to the thalamus
4 - The autonomic nervous system is activated
5 - Sensations travel to the sensory area of the cerebral cortex
6 - Pain reception occurs in the thalamus
7 - Pain interpretation occurs in the cerebral cortex
8 - The person become aware and the response patterns are activated - Medical Indications of Elder Abuse
-
1 - Possibly bruising - old and new bruises at the same time
2 - Skin Tears
3 - Malnutrition/Dehydration
-decrease in thirst, appetite, and sense of smell
4 - Bed sores
5 - Fractures
6 - Patient History - Factors influencing pain...
-
* age
* sex
* culture
* meaning of pain
* attention
* anxiety
* fatigue
* previous experience
* coping style
* family/social - Largest subculture in USA?
- Disabled
- Types of breakthrough pain
-
1 - Incident pain - caused by movement or activity
2 - Spontaneous pain - does not seem to be linked to any specific source - Delirium may be casued by...
-
- infection
- medications
- fever
- nutritional
- grief/stress
- change of environment - Sensory discriminative
-
* nerve transmission occurs between the thalamus and sensory cortex
* person perceives the location, severity, and character of pain - Characteristics of Delirium (vs. Dementia)
-
- Short term
- Reversible
- Acute stage of confusion
- Agitation - Techniques for Pain Control
-
1 - PCA (Patient-controlled analgesia)
2 - Epidural pain control
3 - Direct IV pain control
4 - Breakthrough pain control - Characteristics of Dementia
-
- cognitive decline
- can be slow and progressive
- irreversible - Examples of two tissues that don't contain receptors that transmit pain signals
- Brain and alveoli
- Common errors in drug self-administration
-
* may forget
- writing the drug regimen on the top of the bottle with large letters and numbers is helpful
* errors in taking medication may result from poor communication with health care professional
* attitude and long-ingrained feelings about taking medicine
- when obtaining a medication history, it is very important that the nurse ask patients about all OTC drugs, including herbal and food supplements - Electrical
-
skin layers are burned invloving the muscle and subcutaneous tissue, causing
injury to nerve endings. - Define restraint
- any device or medication that prevents the patient from moving freely
- Perception =
- point at which a person is aware of pain
- Examples of things cultures share...
-
* Food/nutrition * Dress
* Language * Morals
* Treatment of illness
* Laws * Art * Customs
* Rituals * Economics
* Family systems - Characteristics of Acute Pain
-
* rapid onset
* it is self-limiting; with an end in sight
* an episode that lasts for seconds to fewer than about six months - What is the single most important predictor of falls?
- a history of falling
- Motivational-affective
-
* interaction between the reticular formation and limbic system results in pain perception
* limbic system controls emotional response and coping with pain - What is goal of Healthy People 2010?
- Goal is to eliminate disparities with healthcare delivery among racial and ethnic minorities.
- Behavioral reactions to pain...
-
1 - Anticipation
2 - Sensation
3 - Aftermath - Common causes of undernutrition include
-
- drugs
- chewing problems
- immobility
- infections
- alzheimer's disease - Superficial
-
* short duration
* sharp sensation
* localized - Characteristics of Generativity (Stage 7)
-
Generativity
- Creative
- Giving of self to world
- Perpetuating
- Helping and giving to next generation
- Vital involvement in adulthood activities
- Participation in caring for what one truly believes in Nurturing and maintaining relationships
- Care for the present and concern for the future - Characteristics of Deep Visceral
-
* diffuse
* radiating
* sharp or dull or unique to organ involved - Older people tend to have more short term or more long term memory loss?
- short term
- Locations of Pain
-
1 - Superficial or Cutaneous
2 - Deep Visceral
3 - Referred
4 - Radiating - Types of Elder Abuse (8)
-
Physical Abuse
Emotional Abuse
Financial Abuse
Sexual Abuse
Active Neglect
Passive Neglect
Denial of Civil Rights
Self Abuse / Neglect
- Characteristics of Chronic Pain
-
* an episode of pain htat lasts for six months or longer
* pain may be limited, intermittent, or persistent
* difficulty describing the pain because it is poorly localized - Characteristics of Isolation (Stage 6)
-
Isolation
- Inability or unwillingness to express feelings
- Dissatisfaction with long term marriage
- Feelings of bitterness toward life events
- Refusing assistance from family, friends, neighbors - Characteristics of Referred
- * pain felt in part of body separate from source of pain
- Older patients with a pressure ulcer need additional ...
-
protein
vitamen C
zinc - Characteristics of A-beta neurons -
-
* mechanoreceptor
* thicker
* when released inhibit the other neurotransmitters (close the gate) - Define active neglect
- the intentional failure to perform a care giving function in order to inflict pain or injury
- Three Physiological Components of Pain
-
1 - Reception
2 - Perception
3 - Reaction - Define passive neglect
- the unintentional failure to perform a care giving function which results in pain or injury
- Types of Pain
-
* acute
* chronic
- Intractable pain (malignant pain)
- Nonmalignant pain - Effects of drugs on older adults
-
Older adults are at a high risk for side effects and toxic effects from drug.
Elders have less reserve capacity in most organ systems - Signs of pain ...
-
* facial expression
* clenching teeth
* holding the painful part
* bent posture
* grimaces, cries, groans
* restlessness
* frequent rests - Age-related changes of the renal system include -
-
* decreased renal blood flow
* reduced glomerular filtration rate - Reaction is a physiological and behavioral response to pain.
- Age-related changes that affect drug distribution include -
-
* smaller amounts of total body water
* an increased ratio of adipose tissue
* a decreased albumin level
* a decreased cardiac output - Cognitive-evaluative (intellect)
-
* higher cortical centers in the brain influence perception
* helps the person to interpret the intensity and quality of pain so that action can be taken - Which is the most potent group of psychoactive drugs?
- antipsychotics
- Non malignant pain
-
* Pain such as low-back pain results from nonprogressive or healed tissue injury.
* Pain is still ongoing and often does not respond to treatment.
* Frequently the cause is unknown. - The minimal nutritional requirements of the human body remain consistent from youth through old age, with a few exceptions.
-
Three interactional systems of pain... -
1 - sensory-discriminateive
2 - motivational-affective
3 - cognitive-evaluative - The most common accident among older patients in a hospital or LTC is?
- falling
- Methods for Intractable Pain
-
* restorative care - nurses continue to use nonpharmacological measures that are effective for individual patients.
* hospice
* pain clinics -
Older adults need an increased dietary intake of calcium, vitamin D, vitamin C, and vitamin A because alteration with age disrupt the ability to store, use and absorb these substances.
- The central processing of pain occurs at three different levels of the brain
-
1 - thalamus
2 - midbrain
3 - cortex
- Oversedation, isolation, an unsafe environment are all types of what?
- Neglect
- To manage delirium, the nurse should ...
- use a calm voice in reorienting the patient and try to divert attention away from devise or tubes
- Lack of privacy and involuntary servitude are types of ?
- Abuse
- Characteristics of Radiating
- * sensation of pain extending from initial site of injury to another body part
- Define Culture
- body of learned beliefs, traditions, and guides for behavior that are shared among members of a particular group
- The sympathetic nervous system response is usually stimulated by superficial pain.
- What are the six target areas of Healthy People 2010?
-
Infant Mortality
Cancer Screening
Cardiovascular Disease
Diabetes
HIV
Immunizations - Non-pharmalogic relief measures
-
* distraction
* imagery (therapeutic touch)
* relaxation
* cutaneous stimulation
* TENS (transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation)
* acupuncture
* hypnosis -
Older adults experience a greater decline in the ability to taste sweet and salt than in the discrimination of bitter and sour - Physical dependent =
- a physiologic adaptation of the body tissues so that continued administration of the drug is required for normal tissue function
- Native American Indians
-
* 10 Tribes
* 1.9 million
* Cherokee and Navajo have largest populations
* Each tribe has own language
* Equal number of Native Americans live on reservations as in cities
* Bureau of Indian Affairs (1954) now called Indian Health Services
* Family oriented
* Some tribes are MATRIARCHAL
* Same household with wife's relatives
* Religion and healing are blended together
* Values and basic beliefs to culture and religion are day to day
* Value harmony with earth
* Native American healers are respected - Larger peptide (ENDORPHINS) exert more prolonged analgesic (pain-relieving) effects than do the enkephalins (smaller peptides)
-
Approximately 80-85% of older adults are relatively healthy and live in the community at home, in assisted-living facilities, or in retirement complexes.
Five percent reside in longterm care facilities.
Ten to fifteen percent are il - For patients with cancer the aim of drug therapy is to _____ pain rather than cure it.
- ANTICIPATE and MINIMIZE
- African Americans
-
* Many health problems closely associated with economic status
* Poverty, discrimination
* Social and psychological barriers to health care
* Morbidity and mortality rates are higher than general population and other minorities
* Morbidity = illness
* Mortality = death
* Higher infant mortality rates
* Families are MATRIFOCAL (no male in household)
* Even when a male is present families are oriented around women
* Families tend to be very supportive during times of crises and illness
* Some fold medicine is used by some raised in South - Dyspnea
- is a subjective experience in which the patient experiences an uncomfortable awareness of breathing, breathlessness, or severe shortness of breath
- Diminished senses of taste and smell often result in a loss of appeal of food.
- Essential Data for a complete Pain History
-
1 - Precipitating factors
2 - Aggravating factors
3 - Localization of pain
4 - Character and quality of pain
5 - Duration of pain - Asian Americans
-
* Family is basic institution
* Well-defined family roles
* Close-knit; tend to be in same community
* Mistrust is a barrier
* Eldest son has responsibilities
* Women often secure jobs
* Consider seek illness cures in herbs, therapeutic diets, and hygienic measures
* Information is usually transmitted orally and with secrecy
* Beliefs in BALANCE - Elders with depression may experience
-
* early morning insomnia
* excessive daytime sleeping
* poor appetite
* a lack of energy
* an unwillingness to participate in social and recreational activities - Common health issues and problems that may affect older adults in any setting include ...
-
Health promotion
Self-management
Nutritional awareness
Physical fitness and mobility
Stress management
Accidents
Drug use and misuse
Mental health
Elder neglect and abuse - Delirium
-
* An acute confusional state
* Fast onset
* Duration of hours to less than one month
* Cause is multiple, such as surgery, infection, drugs
* Usually reversible
* Remove or treat the cause as management
* Nursing intervention -reorient the patient to reality; provide a safe environment - What are the two most common nutritional problems in both hospital and LTC settings?
-
Anorexia
Wight loss - Dementia
-
* Chronic, progressive cognitive decline
* Slow onset
* Duration of months to years
* Cause is unknown
* Non-reversible
* Management includes treat signs and symptoms
* Use validation therapy (acknowledge the patient's feelings and do not argue)
- provide a safe environment
- observe for associated behaviors (delusions and hallucinations) - Identify nursing interventions for common health and economic issues common to the older adult.
-
Religious assistance
Community assistance
Government assistance - The ethics of nursing includes -
-
* ensuring patient confidentiality
* getting informed consent for certain procedures and surgery
* respecting the right of patients to make autonomous decisions about their care - Most common abuse of elders is
- Financial abuse is most common
- Epidural space =
- the space between the dura mater and the vertebral column
- Pain is subjective
- When respirations fall below 10, the nurse should rouse the patient (p 75, ig).
- Neurotransmitters are the chemicals that exert inhibitory (slowing down) or excitatory (speeding up) activity at postsynaptic nerve cell membranes.
-
Chapter 9
Palliative Care = - relieving or alleviating without curing
-
The best questions for cultural interviews are "semi-structured" and open-ended questions.
Examples of such questions - -
* I am interested in where you were born. Could you describe the community (or country)?
* I would like to know where your parents were born. If they are living, where are they now?
* Tell me about your household. Who lives in it? Are they related to you?
* Describe how you usually spend your days. What do you like to do most?
* Please describe your education for me.
* I am also interested in the church and religion. What do they mean to you?
* Tell me about what you believe about health. What does it mean to "be healthy"? To whom do you look for health care?
* Is there anything else you would like to tell me? - Characteristics of Pain
-
* Highly Individualized experience
* Invisible phenomenon
* Body's defense mechanism that indicates the person is experiencing a problem - Elder Neglect and Abuse
-
- Neglect
- Physical
- Financial
- Emotional - McCaffery definition of pain
- Pain is whatever the person experiencing it says it is, existing whenver he or she says it does.
- Physical
- use of physical force that results in bodily injury, especially in the bathing suit zone
- Withdrawal symptoms include -
-
- nausea and vomiting
- abdominal cramping
- muscle twitching
- profuse perspiration
- delirium
- convulsions - Factors that tend to decrease the threshold for and tolerance of pain include -
-
* discomfort * insomnia
* fatigue * anxiety
* fear * anger
* sadness * depression
* mental isolation
* introversion
* past experience - Four categories of location related pain
-
1 - Localized pain is pain confined to the site of origin.
2 - Projected pain is pain along a specific nerve or nerves.
3 - Radiating pain is diffuse pain around the site of origin that is not well localized.
4 - Referred pain is pain perceived in an area distant from the site of painful stimuli. - Cordotomy =
- a cut in the pain pathway at the midline portion of the spinal cord
- Spirituality =
- the connections to self, others, the environment and God
- Neuromodulators are protein hormones in the brain.
- Physiologic and behavioral responses to acute and chronic pain -
-
Acute Pain
* Increased blood pressure initially
* Increased pulse rate
* Increased respiratory rate
* Dilated pupils
* Perspiration
* Restlessness
* Inability to concentrate
* Apprehension
* Distress - QI for pain should be based on the following tenets (p. 91, ig)
-
* pain should attract clinician's attention
* Information about analgesics should be accessible where orders are written
* Patients should be assured of responsive analgesic care and urged to communicate pain
* polices and safeguards should be implemented for the use of technology-supported pain care
* Implementation of these measures should be assessed and coordinated - The most important type of opioid receptor is the _____ receptor.
- MU
- Giving the right drug and the required dose at the proper interval
-
* alleviates the fear of pain
* protects the pateint from drug seeking behavior
* reduces dependence - Rhizotomy =
- sensory nerve roots are destroyed where they enter the spinal cord
- Financial
- occurs when the patient's property or resources are mismanaged or misused
- Side effects of NSAIDs
-
* Gastric irritation and upset
* Renal toxicity
* Decreased clotting - Reminiscence =
- the process of randomly reflecting on memories of events in one's life
- Nociceptors =
-
free nerve endings (receptors capable of responding to painful stimuli).
Nociceptors are located in various body tissues and are activated by thermal, mechanical, and chemical stimuli.
- The ethics regarding cultural care of patients considers -
- * the values of each individual patient and his or her cultural beliefs and practices
- The most common symptoms of distress are -
-
* dysphagia (impaired swallowing)
* pain
* dyspnea
* nausea and vomiting
* agitation - Neuralgias =
- pain along the distribution of nerves
- Withdrawal symptoms may result when a patient who is physically dependent abruptly ceases using the drug.
- Nonpharmacologic Interventions
-
* Altering the environment to facilitate the circulation of cool air
* Cooling the body
* Position the patient to facilitate chest expansion
* Encouraging imagery and deep breathing
* Intervening to conserve patient energy
* Facilitating the patient's rest -
The activity of endorphins and enkephalins may be enhanced by prolonged strenuous activity , transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulators (TENS), and antidepressant therapy.
- Two specific fibers can transmit stimuli
-
1 - A Delta Fibers found primarily in the skin and muscle
* myelinated
* carry rapid, sharp, pricking, or piercing sensations.
2 - C Fibers which are distributed in muscle, periosteum, and viscera.
* unmediated or poorly myelinated
* conduct thermal, chemical, and strong mechanical impulses
* usually produce constant pain - Various Meds and Routes for Chrnic Pain
-
1 - Epidural analgesia
2 - Long acting/controlled release MS (morphine sulfate)
Rectal analgesia
3 - Transdermal
4 - PCA pump
5 - Continuous drip MS
6 - Surgery - Emotional
- intentional use of threats, humiliation, intimidation, and isolation toward older adult
- Chronic Pain
-
* Normal blood pressure
* Normal pulse rate
* Normal respiratory rate
* Normal pupils
* Dry skin
* Immobility or physical inactivity
* Withdrawal
* Despair
- Common Nursing Dx related to pain
-
* Acute Pain
* Chronic Pain
* Anxiety related to loss of control
* Fear related to pain
* Powerlessness related to the illness-related regimen
* Ineffective role performance related to a change in health status and impaired coping
* Altered sexuality patterns related to illness and pain
* Impaired physical mobility related to pain and discomfort
* Activity intolerance related to pain and/or depression
* Sleep pattern disturbance related to pain
* Self-care deficit (total or partial) related to pain
* Altered health maintenance related to a feeling of hopelessness - Neglect
- occurs when a caregiver fails to provide for a patient's basic needs
- Religiosity =
- the acts that are practiced alone or with others to preserve spiritual understanding
- Stages of Grieving Process
-
1 - Shock and disbelief
2 - Developing awareness
3 - Restitution
4 - Resolution
5 - Idealization - Factors that tend to increase the threshold for and tolerance of pain include -
-
* symptom relief
* sleep * rest
* sympathy * understanding
* diversion * elevation of mood * analgesics
* anxiolytic agents
* antidepressants - Theories of Pain
-
1 - Specificity Theory = certain pain receptors are stimulated by specific type of sensory stimuli that sends impulses to the brain.
2 - Pattern Theory = pain originates in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. A certain pattern of nerve impulses is produced and results in intense receptor stimulating that is coded in the CNS and signifies pain.
3 - Gate Control Theory =
* existence and intensity of pain experience depends on the particular transmission of neurologic impulses - In addition to endorphin "keys" and receptor "locks", researchers have found antilocks, called antagonists, that keep endorphins from working
- Stages of the Dying Process
-
1 - Denial
2 - Anger
3 - Bargaining
4 - Depression
5 - Acceptance - Endorphin receptors and antilocks have been found throughout the body
- The parasympathetic nervous system response is usually stimulated by deeper pain and results in slowing down of all systems to conserve energy.
- Common Emotional Signals
-
* Withdrawal
- person is preparing to "let go"
* Vision-like experiences
* Letting go
- may perform repetitive task
* Saying goodbye -
A beta-endorphin is 50 times stronger than morphine.
A dynorphin is 190 times stronger than morphine. - Addiction =
- used to describe the persistent craving for and abuse of a drug for recreational purposes. IT IS PSYCHOLOGIC PHENOMENON, NOT A PHYSICAL ONE.
- The goals of care for a patient near death are -
-
* To control symptoms
* To promote meaningful interactions between the patient and significant others
* To facilitate a peaceful death - The patient's interpretation of the physical sensation is influenced by the patient's -
-
* culture
* previous experiences with and without pain
* beliefs about self
* interpretation of the future
* present environment
* persons in the environment