❤️🩹 Medical-Surgical Nursing Care Plan on Myocardial Infarction
Medical-Surgical Nursing | Cardiology Nursing | NANDA Format
Heart Attack | Practical File Ready
📋 Student Information
| Student Name | [Your Name] |
| Course | BSc Nursing / GNM / ANM |
| Subject | Medical-Surgical Nursing |
| Topic | Nursing Care Plan on Myocardial Infarction |
| Format | NANDA Nursing Care Plan Format |
| Date of Submission | [Enter Date] |
| Clinical Instructor | [Instructor Name] |
📄 Page 1 — Patient Identification Data
| Name | Mr. Ramesh Chandra Gupta |
| Age | 62 Years |
| Sex | Male |
| Address | Jaipur, Rajasthan |
| Occupation | Retired Government Employee |
| Marital Status | Married |
| Religion | Hindu |
| Annual Income | ₹5,00,000/- approximately |
| Diagnosis | Acute Myocardial Infarction — STEMI |
| Type of Family | Joint Family |
| Family Size | 7 Members |
| Ward Name | Intensive Cardiac Care Unit / Cardiac Ward |
| Bed Number | 05 |
| Doctor Incharge | Dr. A. K. Verma |
| Date of Admission | 05/02/2026 |
| Hospital Name | SMS Hospital, Jaipur |
📄 Page 2 — Chief Complaints & Clinical History
CHIEF COMPLAINTS
The patient was admitted to the Intensive Cardiac Care Unit with the following complaints:
- Severe crushing chest pain for 2 hours
- Pain radiating to left arm, left shoulder and jaw
- Profuse sweating
- Shortness of breath at rest
- Nausea and vomiting
- Palpitations and dizziness
- Feeling of fear and anxiety
HISTORY OF PRESENT ILLNESS
Mr. Ramesh Chandra Gupta, a 62-year-old male, was apparently well until the morning of admission when he suddenly developed severe crushing retrosternal chest pain while resting at home. The pain was pressure-like in nature and radiated to the left arm, left shoulder and jaw. The intensity of pain was 10/10 on the pain scale.
The pain was associated with profuse sweating, shortness of breath, nausea, vomiting, palpitations and dizziness. The patient also expressed fear and stated that he felt as if something serious was happening to him. The pain was not relieved by rest. Family members immediately brought him to the emergency department.
On arrival, the patient was anxious, restless, pale and sweating. His pulse rate was increased, blood pressure was elevated and oxygen saturation was reduced on room air. An immediate ECG was performed, which showed ST-segment elevation suggestive of acute myocardial infarction. Blood samples were sent for cardiac enzymes and other investigations. The patient was shifted to ICCU for continuous cardiac monitoring and emergency management.
PAST MEDICAL HISTORY
- History of hypertension for 15 years.
- History of type 2 diabetes mellitus for 8 years.
- History of dyslipidemia for 5 years.
- No previous history of myocardial infarction.
- No history of bronchial asthma or tuberculosis.
- No known drug allergy.
PAST SURGICAL HISTORY
- No history of major surgery.
- No history of cardiac surgery or angioplasty.
- No history of blood transfusion.
PRESENT MEDICATION HISTORY
| Medication | Dose | Frequency | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Amlodipine | 5 mg | Once daily | Control of blood pressure |
| Metformin | 500 mg | Twice daily | Control of blood sugar |
| Glimepiride | 2 mg | Once daily before breakfast | Control of diabetes mellitus |
| Rosuvastatin | 10 mg | At bedtime | Control of cholesterol |
ALLERGIC HISTORY
- No known drug allergy.
- No known food allergy.
- No history of allergic reaction to previous medications.
📄 Page 3 — Family History, Family Composition & Family Tree
FAMILY HISTORY
- The patient belongs to a joint family.
- There are 7 members in the family.
- Father had a history of myocardial infarction and expired due to cardiac illness.
- Mother had hypertension and diabetes mellitus.
- Younger brother has a history of coronary artery disease.
- Family history is positive for cardiovascular disease, hypertension and diabetes mellitus.
- No history of communicable disease in the family.
FAMILY COMPOSITION
| Name | Age/Sex | Education | Occupation | Marital Status | Relationship | Health Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mr. Ramesh Chandra Gupta | 62/M | Graduate | Retired Govt Employee | Married | Self / Patient | Myocardial Infarction |
| Mrs. Sita Gupta | 58/F | Secondary | Housewife | Married | Wife | Healthy |
| Mr. Vikas Gupta | 35/M | MBA | Bank Employee | Married | Son | Healthy |
| Mrs. Priya Gupta | 32/F | Graduate | Housewife | Married | Daughter-in-law | Healthy |
| Master Aarav Gupta | 8/M | Class 3 | Student | Unmarried | Grandson | Healthy |
| Miss Ananya Gupta | 5/F | UKG | Student | Unmarried | Granddaughter | Healthy |
| Master Ayaan Gupta | 2/M | - | - | Unmarried | Grandson | Healthy |
FAMILY TREE
📄 Page 4 — Dietary, Personal, Socio-Economic & Environmental History
DIETARY HISTORY
- The patient takes a mixed diet, mostly vegetarian with occasional non-vegetarian food.
- He has a habit of taking oily and fried foods such as samosa, kachori, pakora and puri.
- He consumes high-salt food items such as pickles, papad and namkeen.
- He takes tea 4–5 times daily with sugar.
- Intake of fresh fruits, green leafy vegetables and dietary fibre is inadequate.
- He consumes full-cream milk and ghee frequently.
- Fluid intake is approximately 2 litres per day.
- No history of food allergy is reported.
PERSONAL HISTORY
| Sleep | 5–6 hours per night; disturbed due to anxiety after chest pain |
| Appetite | Previously good; reduced during acute illness |
| Bowel Habit | Once daily; tendency of constipation due to low fibre intake |
| Bladder Habit | 6–7 times/day; nocturia 1–2 times/night |
| Smoking | History of smoking for 30 years; approximately 8–10 cigarettes/day |
| Alcohol | Occasional alcohol intake |
| Exercise | Sedentary lifestyle; no regular walking or exercise |
| Allergy | No known drug or food allergy |
SOCIO-ECONOMIC HISTORY
- The patient belongs to a middle-class family.
- The family lives in their own house.
- The main source of income is pension and son's salary.
- The family has access to nearby health facilities.
- The family members are cooperative and supportive in patient care.
- Health-seeking behaviour of the family is satisfactory.
ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY
- The patient lives in a pucca house with adequate ventilation and lighting.
- Safe drinking water is available at home.
- Sanitary latrine facility is present.
- Waste disposal is done through municipal collection.
- No exposure to industrial pollution or harmful chemicals.
- Kitchen uses LPG for cooking.
- Home environment is generally clean and hygienic.
RISK FACTORS PRESENT IN PATIENT
- Age above 60 years
- Male gender
- Hypertension
- Type 2 diabetes mellitus
- Dyslipidemia
- Smoking habit
- Sedentary lifestyle
- High-fat and high-salt diet
- Positive family history of heart disease
📄 Page 5 — Physical Examination: General Examination
GENERAL CONDITION
The patient is conscious, oriented to time, place and person. On admission, he appeared anxious, restless and in acute distress due to severe chest pain and breathlessness. He was pale, sweating and preferred to sit in semi-Fowler’s position. After emergency treatment, the patient became comparatively comfortable but remained anxious about his condition.
GENERAL APPEARANCE
- Built: Moderately obese
- Posture: Semi-Fowler’s position preferred
- Facial expression: Anxious and distressed
- Level of consciousness: Conscious and oriented
- Speech: Clear but interrupted due to breathlessness
- Skin: Pale, cool and clammy on admission
- Personal hygiene: Satisfactory
ANTHROPOMETRIC MEASUREMENTS
| Height | 168 cm |
| Weight | 86 kg |
| BMI | 30.5 kg/m² |
| BMI Interpretation | Obese Class I |
| Waist Circumference | 108 cm |
VITAL SIGNS ON ADMISSION
| Parameter | Patient Value | Normal Value | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Temperature | 98.2°F | 97–99°F | Normal |
| Pulse | 112/min | 60–100/min | Tachycardia |
| Respiration | 28/min | 12–20/min | Tachypnea |
| Blood Pressure | 160/100 mmHg | 120/80 mmHg | Hypertension |
| SpO₂ | 91% on room air | 95–100% | Reduced oxygen saturation |
| Pain Score | 10/10 | 0/10 | Severe chest pain |
HEAD TO TOE GENERAL ASSESSMENT
| Area | Findings |
|---|---|
| Head | Scalp clean; no injury or swelling present. |
| Face | Facial expression anxious; pallor present. |
| Eyes | Conjunctiva pale; pupils equal and reacting to light. |
| Nose | Nostrils patent; mild nasal flaring present due to dyspnea. |
| Mouth | Oral mucosa moist; lips pale; no cyanosis. |
| Neck | No lymph node enlargement; no visible jugular venous distension. |
| Skin | Cool, pale and clammy on admission; diaphoresis present. |
| Extremities | Peripheral pulses weak; capillary refill delayed; no pedal edema. |
📄 Page 6 — Physical Examination: Systemic Examination
SYSTEMIC EXAMINATION
| System | Examination Findings | Nursing Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| Cardiovascular System | S1 and S2 heart sounds audible. Heart rate 112/min, regular but rapid. S3 gallop present. No murmur or pericardial rub heard. Peripheral pulses weak and thready. Capillary refill time approximately 4 seconds. No pedal edema present. | Findings suggest decreased myocardial contractility and reduced cardiac output secondary to myocardial infarction. |
| Respiratory System | Respiratory rate 28/min. Breathing is shallow and rapid. SpO₂ 91% on room air. Bilateral fine inspiratory crackles heard at lung bases. No wheezing or rhonchi. Mild use of accessory muscles present. | Tachypnea and basal crackles indicate mild pulmonary congestion due to left ventricular dysfunction. |
| Central Nervous System | Patient conscious and oriented to time, place and person. GCS 15/15. Pupils equal and reacting to light. No focal neurological deficit. Patient appears anxious and restless. | Neurological status is intact, but anxiety is present due to acute cardiac event and fear of death. |
| Gastrointestinal System | Abdomen soft and non-tender. No guarding or rigidity. Bowel sounds present. Patient had nausea and two episodes of vomiting before admission. | Nausea and vomiting may be associated with acute myocardial infarction and vagal stimulation. |
| Genitourinary System | Urine output adequate after admission. No burning micturition. No hematuria. Patient reports nocturia 2–3 times/night due to diabetes history. | Urine output should be monitored to assess renal perfusion and cardiac output. |
| Musculoskeletal System | No deformity or swelling in joints. Muscle tone normal. Patient is on bed rest due to acute MI. Fatigue and weakness present. | Activity is restricted to reduce myocardial oxygen demand and prevent complications. |
| Integumentary System | Skin pale, cool and clammy on admission. Profuse sweating present. No cyanosis, clubbing, rashes or pressure sores. | Pallor and diaphoresis indicate sympathetic response to pain and reduced cardiac perfusion. |
CARDIOVASCULAR FOCUSED ASSESSMENT
- Chest pain: Severe crushing retrosternal pain radiating to left arm and jaw.
- Pain score: 10/10 on admission.
- Pulse: 112/min, regular and rapid.
- Blood pressure: 160/100 mmHg.
- Peripheral pulses: Weak and thready.
- Capillary refill time: 4 seconds.
- Heart sounds: S1 and S2 audible; S3 gallop present.
- ECG finding: ST elevation in V1–V4 suggestive of anteroseptal STEMI.
RESPIRATORY FOCUSED ASSESSMENT
- Respiratory rate: 28/min.
- Breathing pattern: Rapid and shallow.
- SpO₂: 91% on room air.
- Breath sounds: Fine inspiratory crackles at bilateral lung bases.
- Position: Semi-Fowler’s position provides comfort.
- Oxygen therapy: Started as prescribed to maintain adequate oxygen saturation.
PAIN ASSESSMENT USING PQRST METHOD
| Component | Assessment Finding |
|---|---|
| P — Provocation/Palliation | Pain started at rest and was not relieved by rest or sublingual nitrate. |
| Q — Quality | Crushing, heavy pressure-like pain. |
| R — Region/Radiation | Retrosternal chest pain radiating to left arm, shoulder and jaw. |
| S — Severity | 10/10 on numeric pain rating scale. |
| T — Timing | Sudden onset, continued for approximately 2 hours before hospital arrival. |
📄 Page 7 — Vital Signs Monitoring Record
| Date/Time | Temp | Pulse | Resp. | BP | SpO₂ | Pain |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 05/02/2026 — Admission | 98.2°F | 112/min | 28/min | 160/100 | 91% | 10/10 |
| 05/02/2026 — Post Treatment | 98.4°F | 96/min | 22/min | 140/88 | 95% | 4/10 |
| 06/02/2026 — Day 2 | 98.6°F | 88/min | 20/min | 134/84 | 96% | 2/10 |
| 07/02/2026 — Day 3 | 98.4°F | 82/min | 18/min | 128/80 | 97% | 1/10 |
| 08/02/2026 — Day 4 | 98.6°F | 78/min | 16/min | 124/76 | 98% | 0/10 |
📄 Page 8 — Diagnostic Investigations
| S. No. | Investigation | Normal Value | Patient Value | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hemoglobin | 13–17 g/dL | 13.2 g/dL | Within normal range |
| 2 | Total WBC Count | 4,000–11,000/mm³ | 13,800/mm³ | Raised due to stress response |
| 3 | Platelet Count | 1.5–4 lakh/mm³ | 2.1 lakh/mm³ | Normal |
| 4 | Fasting Blood Sugar | 70–110 mg/dL | 168 mg/dL | Elevated |
| 5 | HbA1c | <6.5% | 8.2% | Poor glycemic control |
| 6 | Serum Creatinine | 0.7–1.3 mg/dL | 1.1 mg/dL | Normal renal function |
| 7 | Total Cholesterol | <200 mg/dL | 246 mg/dL | Elevated |
| 8 | LDL Cholesterol | <100 mg/dL | 156 mg/dL | High cardiac risk |
| 9 | HDL Cholesterol | >40 mg/dL | 31 mg/dL | Low protective cholesterol |
| 10 | Triglycerides | <150 mg/dL | 228 mg/dL | Elevated |
| 11 | Cardiac Troponin I | <34 ng/L | 12,400 ng/L | Markedly raised — confirms MI |
| 12 | CK-MB | <25 U/L | 186 U/L | Myocardial injury |
| 13 | ECG | Normal sinus rhythm | ST elevation in V1–V4 | Anteroseptal STEMI |
| 14 | 2D Echocardiography | LVEF ≥55% | LVEF 40% | Moderate LV dysfunction |
📄 Page 9 — Medical Management / Drug Chart
| S. No. | Medication | Dose | Route | Frequency | Action / Purpose | Nursing Responsibility |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Inj. Streptokinase | 1.5 million IU | IV infusion | Stat over 1 hour | Thrombolytic drug; dissolves clot and restores coronary blood flow. | Check contraindications, monitor bleeding, vital signs and allergic reaction. |
| 2 | Tab. Aspirin | 325 mg loading, then 150 mg OD | Oral | Stat then OD | Antiplatelet; prevents further thrombus formation. | Give after food, monitor bleeding, gastric irritation and black stool. |
| 3 | Tab. Clopidogrel | 300 mg loading, then 75 mg OD | Oral | Stat then OD | Antiplatelet; prevents platelet aggregation and reinfarction. | Monitor bleeding, bruising and educate patient not to stop medicine suddenly. |
| 4 | Tab. Atorvastatin | 80 mg | Oral | HS | High-intensity statin; lowers LDL cholesterol and stabilizes plaque. | Monitor liver function, muscle pain and advise low-fat diet. |
| 5 | Tab. Metoprolol | 50 mg | Oral | BD | Beta blocker; reduces heart rate, BP and myocardial oxygen demand. | Check pulse and BP before giving. Hold and inform doctor if pulse is very low. |
| 6 | Tab. Ramipril | 5 mg | Oral | OD | ACE inhibitor; reduces afterload and prevents ventricular remodeling. | Monitor BP, serum potassium, renal function and dry cough. |
| 7 | Inj. Morphine Sulphate | 4 mg | IV slow | Stat as prescribed | Opioid analgesic; relieves severe chest pain and anxiety. | Monitor respiratory rate, BP, sedation and keep antidote available as per protocol. |
| 8 | Oxygen Therapy | 4 L/min | Nasal cannula | Continuous initially | Improves oxygen supply to myocardium and corrects hypoxia. | Monitor SpO₂, respiratory rate, comfort and skin around nasal cannula. |
| 9 | Tab. Isosorbide Mononitrate | 30 mg | Oral | OD | Nitrate; dilates coronary vessels and reduces angina. | Monitor BP, headache and dizziness. Advise patient to change position slowly. |
| 10 | Tab. Metformin | 500 mg | Oral | BD | Antidiabetic drug; controls blood glucose level. | Give with meals, monitor blood sugar and renal function. |
| 11 | Tab. Glimepiride | 2 mg | Oral | OD before breakfast | Sulfonylurea; increases insulin secretion and controls diabetes. | Monitor for hypoglycemia, give before meals and educate patient about symptoms of low sugar. |
📄 Page 10 — NANDA Nursing Diagnoses
- Acute Pain related to myocardial ischemia and tissue injury as evidenced by severe crushing chest pain 10/10, facial grimacing, diaphoresis, tachycardia and restlessness.
- Decreased Cardiac Output related to impaired myocardial contractility secondary to myocardial infarction as evidenced by tachycardia, weak peripheral pulses, S3 gallop, low oxygen saturation and LVEF 40%.
- Impaired Gas Exchange related to pulmonary congestion secondary to left ventricular dysfunction as evidenced by dyspnea, tachypnea, SpO₂ 91% on room air and bilateral basal crackles.
- Anxiety related to fear of death, severe chest pain and unfamiliar ICCU environment as evidenced by restlessness, repeated questioning, fearful facial expression and verbalization of fear.
- Activity Intolerance related to imbalance between oxygen supply and demand secondary to acute myocardial infarction as evidenced by fatigue, dyspnea on exertion and need for bed rest.
- Risk for Bleeding related to thrombolytic and antiplatelet therapy.
- Deficient Knowledge related to lack of information regarding disease condition, medication adherence, diet, lifestyle modification and follow-up care.
- Ineffective Health Maintenance related to smoking, sedentary lifestyle, uncontrolled diabetes, hypertension and dyslipidemia as evidenced by development of myocardial infarction.
Priority Nursing Diagnoses Selected for Care Plan
| Priority | Nursing Diagnosis | Reason for Priority |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Acute Pain | Severe chest pain increases myocardial oxygen demand and requires immediate relief. |
| 2 | Decreased Cardiac Output | MI affects pumping ability of heart and may lead to shock or heart failure. |
| 3 | Impaired Gas Exchange | Low SpO₂ and pulmonary congestion can reduce oxygen supply to myocardium. |
| 4 | Anxiety | Anxiety increases sympathetic activity, heart rate and cardiac workload. |
| 5 | Deficient Knowledge | Patient education is essential to prevent reinfarction and promote recovery. |
📄 Page 11 — Nursing Care Plan 1: Acute Pain
| Assessment | Nursing Diagnosis | Goal / Expected Outcome | Planning | Implementation | Evaluation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Subjective Data: Patient says, “Mere chest me bahut tez dabav jaisa dard ho raha hai.” Patient reports crushing retrosternal chest pain radiating to left arm, shoulder and jaw. Objective Data: |
Acute Pain related to myocardial ischemia and tissue injury as evidenced by severe crushing chest pain 10/10, facial grimacing, diaphoresis, tachycardia and restlessness. |
Short-Term Goal: Patient will report reduction in chest pain from 10/10 to 3/10 within 30–60 minutes of nursing and medical interventions. Long-Term Goal: |
|
|
Patient’s pain reduced from 10/10 to 4/10 after initial treatment and became 0/10 by Day 2. Patient appeared relaxed, diaphoresis decreased, pulse rate improved and patient verbalized relief from chest heaviness. |
📄 Page 12 — Nursing Care Plan 2: Decreased Cardiac Output
| Assessment | Nursing Diagnosis | Goal / Expected Outcome | Planning | Implementation | Evaluation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Subjective Data: Patient complains of palpitations, breathlessness and weakness. Patient says, “Mujhe letne par saans lene me takleef hoti hai.” Objective Data: |
Decreased Cardiac Output related to impaired myocardial contractility secondary to myocardial infarction as evidenced by tachycardia, weak peripheral pulses, S3 gallop, basal crackles, low oxygen saturation and LVEF 40%. |
Short-Term Goal: Patient will maintain stable vital signs, SpO₂ above 94%, adequate urine output and reduced signs of pulmonary congestion within 24–48 hours. Long-Term Goal: |
|
|
Patient’s vital signs improved gradually. Pulse reduced from 112/min to 78/min, BP improved to 124/76 mmHg and SpO₂ increased to 98% on room air by Day 4. Crackles reduced, peripheral perfusion improved and patient tolerated gradual mobilization. |
📄 Page 13 — Nursing Care Plan 3: Impaired Gas Exchange
| Assessment | Nursing Diagnosis | Goal / Expected Outcome | Planning | Implementation | Evaluation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Subjective Data: Patient complains of shortness of breath and inability to lie flat. Patient says, “Mujhe saans lene me dikkat ho rahi hai.” Objective Data: |
Impaired Gas Exchange related to pulmonary congestion secondary to left ventricular dysfunction as evidenced by dyspnea, tachypnea, SpO₂ 91% on room air, bilateral basal crackles and restlessness. |
Short-Term Goal: Patient will maintain SpO₂ above 94%, reduced dyspnea and improved respiratory rate within 24 hours. Long-Term Goal: |
|
|
Patient’s SpO₂ improved from 91% to 95% after oxygen therapy and reached 98% on room air by Day 4. Respiratory rate reduced from 28/min to 16/min. Dyspnea decreased and basal crackles resolved. |
📄 Page 14 — Nursing Care Plan 4: Anxiety
| Assessment | Nursing Diagnosis | Goal / Expected Outcome | Planning | Implementation | Evaluation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Subjective Data: Patient says, “Kya mujhe kuch ho jayega?” “Mujhe bahut darr lag raha hai.” Patient repeatedly asks about his condition and recovery. Objective Data: |
Anxiety related to fear of death, severe chest pain, sudden hospitalization and unfamiliar ICCU environment as evidenced by restlessness, repeated questioning, fearful expression and verbalization of fear. |
Short-Term Goal: Patient will verbalize reduced anxiety and show improved comfort within 24 hours. Long-Term Goal: |
|
|
Patient verbalized reduced fear and stated that he understood his condition better. Restlessness decreased, sleep improved and patient cooperated with treatment and education. Anxiety level reduced significantly before discharge. |
📄 Page 15 — Nursing Care Plan 5: Activity Intolerance
| Assessment | Nursing Diagnosis | Goal / Expected Outcome | Planning | Implementation | Evaluation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Subjective Data: Patient complains of weakness and fatigue. Patient says, “Thoda sa hilne par bhi thakan aur saans chadh rahi hai.” Objective Data: |
Activity Intolerance related to imbalance between myocardial oxygen supply and demand secondary to acute myocardial infarction as evidenced by fatigue, dyspnea on exertion, weakness and need for bed rest. |
Short-Term Goal: Patient will perform essential activities with assistance without chest pain, severe dyspnea or abnormal vital signs. Long-Term Goal: |
|
|
Patient tolerated gradual mobilization without chest pain or severe dyspnea. Vital signs remained stable during activity. By discharge, patient was able to walk short distance with minimal assistance and understood activity precautions. |
📄 Page 16 — Nursing Care Plan 6: Risk for Bleeding
| Assessment | Nursing Diagnosis | Goal / Expected Outcome | Planning | Implementation | Evaluation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Subjective Data: Patient is receiving thrombolytic and antiplatelet therapy. Patient asks, “Kya blood thinner se bleeding ho sakti hai?” Objective Data: |
Risk for Bleeding related to thrombolytic therapy and antiplatelet medications. |
Short-Term Goal: Patient will remain free from active bleeding during thrombolytic therapy and acute hospitalization. Long-Term Goal: |
|
|
No bleeding episode was observed during hospitalization. IV site remained clean without hematoma. Patient and family verbalized bleeding warning signs and medication precautions before discharge. |
📄 Page 17 — Nursing Care Plan 7: Deficient Knowledge
| Assessment | Nursing Diagnosis | Goal / Expected Outcome | Planning | Implementation | Evaluation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Subjective Data: Patient asks, “Mujhe ye medicines kitne din leni hongi?” “Kya main normal khana kha sakta hoon?” “Dobara heart attack se kaise bach sakta hoon?” Objective Data: |
Deficient Knowledge related to lack of information regarding myocardial infarction, medication adherence, diet, activity, lifestyle modification, warning signs and follow-up care. |
Short-Term Goal: Patient and family will verbalize basic understanding of myocardial infarction and treatment plan before discharge. Long-Term Goal: |
|
|
Patient and family verbalized understanding of disease condition, medicines, diet, activity restrictions, warning signs and follow-up schedule. Patient agreed to stop smoking and follow cardiac rehabilitation plan. |
📄 Page 18 — Discharge Summary
Patient Name: Mr. Ramesh Chandra Gupta
Age/Sex: 62 Years / Male
Hospital Name: Sawai Man Singh (SMS) Medical College & Hospital, Jaipur
Ward: Intensive Cardiac Care Unit (ICCU)
Date of Admission: 05/02/2026
Date of Discharge: 08/02/2026
Final Diagnosis: Acute Anteroseptal Wall Myocardial Infarction (STEMI)
Summary of Hospital Stay
Mr. Ramesh Chandra Gupta, a 62-year-old male, was admitted to the ICCU with complaints of severe crushing retrosternal chest pain radiating to the left arm, shoulder and jaw, associated with sweating, breathlessness, nausea and anxiety. On admission, ECG showed ST-segment elevation in leads V1–V4, suggestive of acute anteroseptal wall STEMI. Cardiac biomarkers were markedly elevated, confirming myocardial infarction.
The patient was managed with emergency cardiac care including oxygen therapy, antiplatelet therapy, analgesics, nitrates, thrombolytic therapy and continuous cardiac monitoring. Streptokinase thrombolysis was administered as prescribed. After treatment, chest pain reduced gradually and ECG showed improvement. The patient remained under close observation for arrhythmias, bleeding, heart failure and recurrent chest pain.
During hospitalization, the patient’s vital signs gradually stabilized. Pain reduced from 10/10 to 0/10, pulse rate improved, oxygen saturation increased to normal range and dyspnea decreased. No major bleeding complication, arrhythmia or cardiogenic shock was observed. Patient was gradually mobilized and educated regarding medication adherence, diet, lifestyle modification, smoking cessation and follow-up care.
Condition at Discharge
- Patient is conscious, oriented and hemodynamically stable.
- No chest pain at the time of discharge.
- Pulse: 78/min, BP: 124/76 mmHg, Respiratory rate: 16/min.
- SpO₂: 98% on room air.
- No active bleeding or respiratory distress present.
- Patient is able to walk short distance with minimal assistance.
- Patient and family understand discharge instructions.
Discharge Medications
| Medication | Dose | Frequency | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tab. Aspirin | 150 mg | Once daily | Prevents clot formation |
| Tab. Clopidogrel | 75 mg | Once daily | Antiplatelet therapy |
| Tab. Atorvastatin | 80 mg | At bedtime | Lowers cholesterol |
| Tab. Metoprolol | 50 mg | Twice daily | Controls heart rate and BP |
| Tab. Ramipril | 5 mg | Once daily | Protects heart and controls BP |
| Tab. Metformin | 500 mg | Twice daily | Controls blood sugar |
| Tab. Glimepiride | 2 mg | Once daily before breakfast | Controls blood sugar |
Discharge Advice
- Take all medicines regularly at the same time every day.
- Do not stop Aspirin or Clopidogrel without cardiologist advice.
- Follow low-salt, low-fat and diabetic-friendly cardiac diet.
- Avoid fried food, ghee, butter, excess salt, sweets and processed food.
- Stop smoking completely and avoid alcohol.
- Take adequate rest and avoid heavy work or weight lifting.
- Start slow walking as advised and gradually increase activity.
- Monitor BP and blood sugar regularly at home.
- Keep follow-up appointment with cardiologist after 2 weeks.
- Call emergency services immediately if chest pain, severe breathlessness, fainting, excessive sweating or sudden weakness occurs.
📄 Page 19 — Health Education
1. Medication Compliance
The patient and family were educated that regular medication is very important after myocardial infarction. Aspirin and Clopidogrel help to prevent clot formation and reduce the risk of another heart attack. The patient was instructed not to stop these medicines without the advice of the cardiologist. Atorvastatin should be taken regularly to control cholesterol and stabilize plaques in blood vessels. Metoprolol and Ramipril help to reduce workload on the heart and control blood pressure. Antidiabetic medicines should be taken regularly to maintain blood sugar level.
2. Diet Advice
- Take a low-salt, low-fat and diabetic-friendly diet.
- Include green leafy vegetables, fruits, whole grains, pulses and salads.
- Use less oil while cooking and avoid repeated use of oil.
- Avoid fried foods such as samosa, kachori, pakora, puri and chips.
- Avoid ghee, butter, cream, full-fat milk and high-fat non-vegetarian foods.
- Limit sweets, sugar, cold drinks and packaged juices due to diabetes.
- Avoid excess salt, pickles, papad, namkeen and processed foods.
- Drink adequate water unless restricted by doctor.
3. Lifestyle Modification
- Stop smoking completely. Smoking increases risk of reinfarction and sudden cardiac death.
- Avoid alcohol because it may affect heart function, blood pressure and medicines.
- Maintain healthy body weight and reduce abdominal obesity.
- Practice stress reduction methods such as deep breathing, meditation and light yoga after doctor’s advice.
- Take 7–8 hours of sleep daily.
- Avoid mental stress, anger and sudden heavy exertion.
4. Activity and Exercise
- Take complete rest during the early recovery period as advised.
- Start slow walking after doctor’s permission.
- Increase walking duration gradually according to tolerance.
- Avoid heavy weight lifting, running, climbing many stairs and strenuous work during early recovery.
- Stop activity immediately if chest pain, breathlessness, dizziness or palpitations occur.
- Attend cardiac rehabilitation program if available.
5. Warning Signs Requiring Immediate Medical Help
- Chest pain or heaviness lasting more than 5 minutes.
- Pain radiating to left arm, shoulder, jaw, neck or back.
- Sudden severe breathlessness.
- Cold sweating, nausea, vomiting or fainting.
- Fast or irregular heartbeat with dizziness.
- Black stool, blood in urine, vomiting blood or excessive bleeding.
- Sudden severe headache, weakness of one side of body or difficulty speaking.
6. Follow-Up Care
- First follow-up with cardiologist after 2 weeks.
- Regular BP and blood sugar monitoring at home.
- Repeat lipid profile and HbA1c as advised.
- Follow-up ECG and echocardiography as advised by doctor.
- Carry medication list and discharge summary during every hospital visit.
- Family members should also undergo BP, blood sugar and lipid screening due to family history of heart disease.
📚 Bibliography
- Brunner & Suddarth’s Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing, Latest Edition, Wolters Kluwer.
- NANDA International Nursing Diagnoses: Definitions and Classification 2024–2026.
- Lewis’s Medical-Surgical Nursing: Assessment and Management of Clinical Problems, Latest Edition.
- Davidson’s Principles and Practice of Medicine, Latest Edition.
- World Health Organization (WHO) — Cardiovascular Diseases Fact Sheet.
- Indian Nursing Council recommended Medical-Surgical Nursing syllabus and clinical practical guidelines.
⚕️ Medical Disclaimer: This nursing care plan is prepared for educational and academic purposes only for ANM, GNM and BSc Nursing students. It is not intended for actual patient care or clinical decision-making. Always follow hospital protocol, physician orders and standard nursing textbooks.
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