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Showing 4 results for Moradnejad

Sara Lotfian, Fatemeh Kermani, Dr Pardis Moradnejad, Haleh Dadgostar, Maryam Talebi,
Volume 10, Issue 1 (3-2021)
Abstract

Abstract
Aim. This study was conducted to compare the prevalence of neck pain and disability among nurses in intensive care and general wards.
Background. Nursing is known as one of the ten occupations that are associated with musculoskeletal complications. In has been reported that neck and shoulder disorder are more common among nurses with high physical workload than those with low physical workload. So far, few studies have been performed on neck problems in nurses working at intensive care unit.
Method. In this cross-sectional descriptive-comparative study, 40 nurses from intensive care units and 40 nurses from general wards of Rasool Akram hospital, Tehran, Iran, were selected by convenience sampling method. Data collection in both groups was done through completing a checklist of demographic characteristics, Neck Disability Index (NDI) and Neck Pain and Disability Scale (NDPS) questionnaires by participants. The data was analyzed in SPSS version 22 using descriptive and inferential statistics.
Findings. The prevalence of neck pain and disability (measured by NDI and NPDS) in all nurses was 77.5 percent and 60 percent, respectively; 90 percent and 70 percent in nurses working at the intensive care units, and 65 percent and 50 percent in nurses working at general wards. The difference in scores measured by NDI was statistically significant between nurses working at the intensive care units and those working at general wards (P=0.014).
Conclusion. The prevalence of neck pain was significantly high in nurses, which could be due to their high workload that requires appropriate preventive measures and reduction of their physical workload.

Sara Lotfian, Hasan Arian, Rasool Azarfarin, Hooman Bakhshandeh, Pardis Moradnejad,
Volume 11, Issue 1 (3-2022)
Abstract

ABSTRACT
Aim. The aim of the present study was to examine the effect of early mobilization protocol on the strength of diaphragmatic muscle and other inspiratory muscles after open heart surgery.
Background. Early mobilization is recommended as a safe protocol after open heart surgery to decrease hospital stay and post-op respiratory complications; however, our knowledge about its effect on improving respiratory muscles strength is limited.
Methods. This is a randomized single-blinded clinical trial conducted on 80 consecutive patients who underwent coronary artery bypass surgery and/or valvular surgery that were randomly assigned to experimental group (postoperative early mobilization) and control group (routine physiotherapy). On the day before surgery and the day before leaving intensive care unit (ICU), two scores were measured for assessing diaphragmatic muscle strength: maximum inspiratory pressure (PI max) and Strength index (S index). Hemodynamic parameters were also measured and compared.
Findings. According to both PI max and S index, diaphragmatic muscle strength decreased from 77.28 to 59.53 cmH2O in patients after surgery, but the changes in the experimental group was less than the control group, which indicates a significant improvement in the strength of the diaphragm muscle in the experimental group (p≤0.0001). Hemodynamic changes after surgery (lower blood pressure and increased heart rate) occurred in both groups without any significant clinical effect.
Conclusion. Early mobilization after cardiac surgery has positive effect on the strength of diaphragmatic muscle and is also safe as shown to have no adverse effect on hemodynamic parameters.

Pardis Moradnejad, Shiva Khaleghparast, Parisa Firoozbakhsh,
Volume 11, Issue 1 (3-2022)
Abstract

ABSTRACT
Aim. We sought to review studies regarding interventions to prevent or reduce catheter-related bloodstream infections (CRBSIs).
Background. CRBSIs are associated with peripheral and central intravenous catheters, including nontunneled central catheters, tunneled central catheters, peripherally inserted central venous catheters (PICC), totally implanted intravascular access devices (ports), pulmonary artery catheters, and arterial lines. CRBSIs constitute one of the most frequent complications of intravenous catheters. Infections can be reduced by applying recommendations concerning CRBSIs prevention.
Method. Articles published between 2010 and 2022 were searched out in databases PubMed, Cochrane, Medline, SID, Scopus, IRANDOC, and Magiran using the keywords “prevention”, “bacteremia”, and “catheter-related bloodstream infection” and their Persian equivalents. Original articles and systematic reviews in Persian and English on CRBSI prevention that were published in reliable scientific databases from 2010 to 2022 and had available full texts were selected. The primary research yielded 324 articles via title and abstract reviews and in some cases, full-text perusal. Ultimately, 10 articles fulfilling the research purpose of the present study were reviewed.
Findings. According to the articles reviewed herein, medical centers should lessen CRBSIs incidence by educating healthcare personnel regarding intravascular catheter-use indications, proper intravascular catheter insertion procedures, and appropriate infection-control measures. Additionally, they should periodically assess healthcare personnel’s knowledge of and adherence to guidelines vis-à-vis intravascular catheter insertion and maintenance.
Conclusions. It is advisable that healthcare personnel’s knowledge of and adherence to the latest guidelines concerning CRBSIs prevention be continually monitored and enhanced.
Parisa Firoozbakhsh, Shiva Khaleghparast Athari, Saiedeh Mazloomzadeh, Pardis Moradnejad,
Volume 11, Issue 1 (3-2022)
Abstract

Abstract:
Aim. The aim of this article is to review studies that have evaluated effective interventions in the prevention of mediastinitis following cardiothoracic surgery.
Background. Mediastinitis and deep surgical wound infections (DSWI) are life-threatening complications of median sternotomy and have a prevalence of 0.4-5 percent. They can produce a significant financial burden on the patient and also the health care system by prolonging the hospitalization period and the need for repeated surgeries or long-term antibiotics. Several risk factors have been identified for mediastinitis following cardiothoracic surgery, many of which are easily preventable by proper diagnosis.
Method. In this literature review, databases including PubMed, Medline, UpToDate, Scopus, Science
Direct, SID, and Magiran were searched out using the keywords Mediastinitis, Prevention, Cardiothoracic
surgery, and their Persian equivalents. Persian and English original articles (including cross-sectional, case- control, cohort studies, and clinical trials) investigating the effective interventions in the prevention of me- diastinitis following cardiothoracic surgeries and were published between 2000 and 2021 and had an available full text, were included in the current study; review articles, letter to editors, and case reports published in non-authoritative journals were excluded from this study. After primary search, 62 relevant articles were found and based on inclusion/exclusion criteria, 16 articles were finally selected and reviewed in the cur- rent study.
Findings. Mediastinitis ca n be prevented before surgery by hand hygiene, weight loss, smoking cessa-tion, proper prophylactic antibiotics, decolonization of nasopharynx and oropharynx from Staph aureus by Mupirocin ointment, and removing hair using depilatory cream (not the blade). Tight blood glucose monitoring before, after, and during the surgery, disinfection of the surgical field by chlorhexidine, using a proper surgical technique for wound closure and stabilizing the sternum, and proper patient training by nurses about red flags of infection can play an important role in the prevention of mediastinitis.
Conclusion. Mediastinitis ca n be easily prevented by identifying its risk factors and controlling them accurately and in a timely manner.


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فصلنامه پرستاری قلب و عروق Iranian Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing
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