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Showing 3 results for Shariat

Masume Zakerimoghadam, Somayeh Asgari, Esmail Shariat, Hamid Haghani,
Volume 3, Issue 4 (3-2015)
Abstract

Aim. The aim of this study was to evaluate the current and expected status of comfort from the point of view of hospitalized cardiac surgery patients. Background. Providing comfort for the patient is one of the most important aspects of nursing that should be considered in all aspects of care as the top nursing care priority. Method. This was a descriptive comparative cross-sectional study in which 292 patients undergoing cardiac surgery were recruited as study sample. Data collection tool was a demographic form and modified form of Kolcaba's comfort questionnaire evaluating the current and expected status of comfort. After that the reliability and validity of the questionnaire was confirmed, it was completed by interview, the second day after surgery. Data analysis was performed by SPSS, version 16. Findings. The participants reported the best current status of comfort in psychospiritual (63.57 percent) and sociocultural (62.71 percent) domains of comfort, and rated physical domain of comfort as the lowest one(36.64 percent). Patients reported the comfort status in the environmental domain as moderate (54.78 percent). The most expectation of the patients were to be provided with comfort in psychospiritual (92.02 percent), environmental (91.14 percent) and physical (90.96 percent) domains, respectively, and the provision of comfort in sociocultural domain were least expected (88.16 percent). There was a statistically significant relationship of comfort with gender, age, education, occupation, place of residence, income, number of family members, physical activity and history of heart surgery, hypertension and hyperlipidemia. Conclusion. Patients reported less comfort in the physical domain and the most expected domain of comfort was psycho-spiritual. It is recommended that nurses pay more attention to providing comfort in physical and psychospiritual domains.
Mahin Nomali, Dr Zahra Abbasi Dolatabadi, Dr Esmael Shariat,
Volume 4, Issue 4 (3-2016)
Abstract

Abstract

Aim.The aim of this literature review was to study medical staff knowledge about cardiopulmonary resuscitation for pregnant women.

Background.Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) in pregnancy is a rare event. Although rare, CPR during pregnancy is very important, because saves the life of the mother and fetus. Knowledge of medical staff and their formal training on CPR in pregnancy are such factors affecting the maternal and fetal outcomes. Knowing the state of medical staff knowledge in this area will help recognize the existing gaps and plan for improvement.

Method.In this narrative review, databases such as Medline, Science direct, Ovid, Scopus, SID, Magiran and Barakat Knowledge Network System was used to data collection. Articles published between 2000-2016, were searched out by the keywords "cardiopulmonary resuscitation",‌"pregnancy", "knowledge","medical Staff", both inPersian and English. Inclusion criteria was content similarity to subject under study. 

Findings. Out of 20 retrieved papers, 4 cross- sectional analytical articles published between 2008-2012 was selected and reviewed for describing the state of medical staff knowledge on CPR in pregnancy. The knowledge of medical staff was in poor level in different areas such as proper pregnant patient positioning during CPR, sequence of bag- mask ventilation and intubation, defibrillation (application during pregnancy, paddle placement location, energy and considerations), the use of drugs and therapeutic doses and cesarean section in within 4-5 minutes following CPR failure.  

Conclusion.The knowledge of medical staff about CPR in pregnancy is poor. Establishing continuous educational course to improve their knowledge is recommended. 


Banafsheh Ghorbani, Nasibeh Ashouri, Kianoush Saberi, Fatemeh Bahramnezhad, Shariat Esmail,
Volume 7, Issue 4 (3-2019)
Abstract

Abstract
Aim. The purpose of this study was to report a case of mitral valve thrombosis.
Background. Cardiac valve diseases are among the most important diseases, which is widespread despite many treatments. Among the wide range of treatments, replacement or repair of the valve are among the standard treatments. This treatment has many side effects that can be prevented by adhering to a proper diet. The present reports a rare case of mitral valve thrombosis.
Case Report. A 50-year-old female patient undergoes mitral valve replacement (mechanical) and tricuspid valve replacement (mechanical) dated 2018. After discharge, she was treated with 5 mg Warfarin and 80 mg ASA. She returned to the hospital due to progressive shortness of breath. A rare complication of mitral valve thrombosis was diagnosed.
Conclusion. Mitral mechanical valve thrombosis is a rare but dangerous complication. Although thrombosis is closely associated with anticoagulant drug use, this study and similar studies have shown that there is usually no clear relationship between INR and thrombosis.


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فصلنامه پرستاری قلب و عروق Iranian Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing
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