🫀 Surgical Nursing Care Plan on Coronary Angioplasty (PTCA with DES Stenting)
Medical-Surgical Nursing | NANDA Nursing Care Plan Format
Interventional Cardiology | Practical File Ready
📋 Student Information
| Student Name | [Your Name] |
| Course | BSc Nursing / GNM / ANM |
| Subject | Medical-Surgical Nursing / Cardiology Nursing |
| Surgical Nursing Care Plan Topic | Coronary Angioplasty (PTCA with Drug-Eluting Stent) |
| Format | NANDA-I Nursing Care Plan Format |
| Date of Submission | [Enter Date] |
| Clinical Instructor | [Instructor Name] |
📄 Page 1 — Patient Identification Data
| Name | Mr. Rajendra Prasad Sharma |
| Age | 58 Years |
| Sex | Male |
| Address | Vaishali Nagar, Jaipur, Rajasthan |
| Occupation | Bank Manager (Sedentary, High-Stress Desk Job) |
| Marital Status | Married |
| Religion/Category | Hindu |
| Annual Income | ₹8,00,000/- (Salary + Benefits) |
| Diagnosis | Coronary Artery Disease — Single Vessel (90% Proximal LAD Stenosis) |
| Type of Family | Nuclear Family |
| Family Size | 4 Members |
| Ward/Bed No. | Cardiac Care Unit (CCU) / Bed 8 |
| Doctor Incharge | Dr. S. K. Sharma, MD, DM (Interventional Cardiology) |
| Date of Admission | 10/05/2026 |
| Hospital Name | Sawai Man Singh (SMS) Medical College & Hospital, Jaipur |
📄 Page 2 — Chief Complaints & Clinical History
CHIEF COMPLAINT
The patient presented to the cardiology OPD with the following complaints:
- Chest pain (Angina Pectoris) — Retrosternal heaviness/pressure type, radiating to medial aspect of left arm and occasionally to jaw. Occurring predictably on exertion — walking >500 meters, climbing 1-2 flights of stairs, and during stressful work situations (meetings, deadlines). Each episode lasting 5-10 minutes, relieved by rest and sublingual Sorbitrate 5mg within 2-3 minutes. Frequency: 2-3 episodes/day initially, now 4-5 episodes/day over the past week. CCS Class II (slight limitation of ordinary activity).
- Shortness of breath on exertion — NYHA Class II (comfortable at rest, dyspnea on ordinary physical activity). Patient reports becoming breathless after walking approximately 200 meters on level ground, whereas previously he could walk 1 kilometer without difficulty. No orthopnea, no paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea.
- Palpitations — Occasional sensation of rapid, forceful heartbeat, usually coinciding with anginal episodes. No documented arrhythmia. No syncope or presyncope.
- Excessive sweating (diaphoresis) — Cold, clammy sweating during chest pain episodes, soaking through shirt. Resolves with pain relief.
- Fatigue and generalized weakness — Progressive over 1 month; patient reports feeling "drained" by midday; previously active at work now requiring rest periods; difficulty concentrating during afternoon meetings.
- Progressive decrease in exercise tolerance — Quantifiable reduction: walking capacity decreased from >1 kilometer to <200 meters in 2 weeks.
HISTORY OF PRESENT ILLNESS
The patient, Mr. Rajendra Prasad Sharma, a 58-year-old bank manager with a predominantly sedentary, high-stress occupational profile, presented with a 2-week history of progressive exertional angina. He was apparently well until approximately 14 days prior to admission, when he first noticed retrosternal heaviness while rushing to a meeting after climbing two flights of stairs. Initially, symptoms were mild (CCS Class I), occurring only on significant exertion (climbing >2 flights, walking >1 kilometer briskly), and were easily relieved by 2-3 minutes of rest.
Over the next 10 days, symptoms progressively worsened. The threshold for angina decreased — by day 7, chest discomfort occurred after walking just 400-500 meters on level ground. He also noted the emergence of dyspnea accompanying the chest pain. His wife observed that he had become "easily tired" and would sit down to rest after minimal activity. He self-medicated with sublingual Sorbitrate 5mg (prescribed by his family physician for suspected angina) which provided consistent relief within 2-3 minutes.
By day 12-14, his condition had deteriorated to CCS Class II-III — chest pain occurring after walking only 200 meters on level ground or climbing one flight of stairs. He also experienced one episode of angina at rest lasting approximately 8 minutes while watching television — this was particularly alarming. His wife insisted on a cardiology consultation.
At a local clinic, a resting 12-lead ECG was performed, which revealed ST-segment depression of 2mm in anterior leads (V2 through V6) with T-wave inversion — pattern consistent with anterior wall myocardial ischemia. He was promptly referred to the cardiology department at SMS Hospital, Jaipur. A transthoracic 2D Echocardiogram with Doppler was performed on 10/05/2026, which revealed: (a) Mildly reduced Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction (LVEF) of 52% (Simpson's biplane method; normal ≥55%), (b) Regional Wall Motion Abnormality — anterior wall and anteroseptal hypokinesia, (c) Normal right ventricular size and function, (d) No significant valvular abnormalities, (e) No pericardial effusion, (f) Left atrial size — upper normal limit.
Given the compelling clinical picture (progressive crescendo angina), objective evidence of ischemia on ECG, and resting LV dysfunction on Echo, the decision was made to proceed with invasive coronary angiography. On 11/05/2026, coronary angiography was performed via the right radial artery approach (6 French sheath). The angiogram revealed:
- Left Anterior Descending (LAD) Artery: 90% tubular, eccentric, calcified stenosis (Type B2 lesion according to ACC/AHA classification) in the proximal segment, just distal to the first septal perforator. The lesion was approximately 18mm in length. TIMI flow was grade 2 (delayed filling) distal to the stenosis.
- Left Circumflex (LCx) Artery: Mild (20-30%) diffuse plaque in the proximal segment. No flow-limiting stenosis. TIMI 3 flow.
- Right Coronary Artery (RCA): Dominant vessel. Mild (20%) plaque in the mid-segment. No significant stenosis. TIMI 3 flow.
The patient was diagnosed with Single Vessel Coronary Artery Disease — Critical Proximal LAD Stenosis with objective evidence of myocardial ischemia and early LV dysfunction. After discussion with the patient and family, a same-sitting ad-hoc Percutaneous Transluminal Coronary Angioplasty (PTCA) with Drug-Eluting Stent (DES) deployment was performed.
PTCA Procedure Details: The LAD lesion was crossed with a 0.014-inch guidewire. Pre-dilatation was performed with a 2.5 × 15mm semi-compliant balloon at 10-12 atmospheres. A Sirolimus-eluting Drug-Eluting Stent (DES) of dimensions 3.0mm diameter × 23mm length was deployed at 14 atmospheres and post-dilated with a 3.5mm non-compliant balloon at 16-18 atmospheres to ensure optimal stent apposition. Final angiogram showed <5% residual stenosis with TIMI 3 flow (normal antegrade flow). No procedural complications — no dissection, no side branch occlusion, no no-reflow phenomenon, no arrhythmia. The total contrast volume used was 120 mL of non-ionic, low-osmolar contrast agent (Iohexol). The procedure duration was 45 minutes. The right radial sheath was removed immediately post-procedure, and a TR Band (radial compression device) was applied with the patent hemostasis protocol. The patient was transferred to the Cardiac Care Unit in stable condition for post-procedural monitoring.
PAST MEDICAL HISTORY
- Hypertension: Diagnosed 10 years ago at age 48 during a routine health checkup. Initial BP was 156/94 mmHg. Prescribed Tablet Telmisartan 40mg once daily. Home BP monitoring shows average readings of 136/88 mmHg over the past year — not at target (<130/80 mmHg for CAD patients). Patient admits occasional missed doses (1-2 times per week) due to busy work schedule.
- Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus: Diagnosed 5 years ago at age 53. Fasting blood sugar at diagnosis was 168 mg/dL. Prescribed Tablet Metformin 500mg twice daily after meals. Recent HbA1c (done 2 weeks ago): 7.8% (target <7.0% for cardiovascular patients — suboptimal control). Patient admits poor dietary compliance — "I have a sweet tooth, I cannot resist sweets at family functions." No formal diabetic diet education received. No self-monitoring of blood glucose at home.
- Dyslipidemia: Diagnosed 3 years ago during a company health camp. Lipid profile: Total Cholesterol 240 mg/dL, LDL 158 mg/dL, HDL 36 mg/dL, Triglycerides 198 mg/dL. Prescribed Tablet Atorvastatin 20mg once daily at bedtime. Most recent lipid profile (2 weeks ago): Total Cholesterol 228 mg/dL, LDL 142 mg/dL, HDL 34 mg/dL, Triglycerides 210 mg/dL — showing inadequate control on current statin dose.
- No history of thyroid disorders, bronchial asthma, tuberculosis, epilepsy, or any chronic liver or kidney disease.
- No known drug allergies. No food allergies. Contrast dye tolerated without any allergic reaction during angiography.
PAST SURGICAL HISTORY
- No history of any major surgical intervention prior to this PTCA procedure.
- No history of general anesthesia exposure.
- No history of blood transfusion.
- Local anesthesia with 2% Lignocaine (plain) at the right radial access site — approximately 5mL infiltrated subcutaneously. Tolerated well without any complications. No allergic or adverse reactions to local anesthetic.
- This coronary angiography and PTCA represent the patient's first invasive cardiac procedure. No prior catheterization, angioplasty, or cardiac surgery.
📄 Page 3 — Family History & Composition
FAMILY HISTORY
- The patient belongs to a nuclear family consisting of himself, his wife, and their two children (son and daughter).
- Father: Mr. Ramprasad Sharma. Suffered an acute myocardial infarction (anteroseptal wall) at the age of 52 years. Underwent thrombolytic therapy (Streptokinase) at the time. Survived the acute event but developed ischemic cardiomyopathy with progressive heart failure over the next 13 years. Expired at age 65 due to decompensated congestive heart failure.
- Mother: Mrs. Kamla Devi Sharma. Diagnosed with hypertension at age 60. On regular antihypertensive medication (Amlodipine 5mg OD). Currently alive at age 80. Also has mild osteoarthritis of both knees. No history of cardiac events. No diabetes.
- Younger Brother: Mr. Rameshwar Prasad Sharma, age 50 (2 years younger than patient). Diagnosed with coronary artery disease (triple vessel disease) at age 50 during evaluation for exertional dyspnea. Underwent elective Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting (CABG × 3 grafts — LIMA to LAD, SVG to OM, SVG to PDA) at age 52 at a private hospital in Delhi. Currently on secondary prevention medications and doing well. His diagnosis was a major motivating factor for the patient to seek cardiac evaluation.
- Younger Sister: Mrs. Sunita Devi, age 54. Married, living in Udaipur. No known comorbidities. Last health checkup (1 year ago) — BP 124/78, fasting blood sugar 98 mg/dL. Advised to undergo cardiovascular risk screening given strong family history but has not done so yet.
- Summary: There is a strong, unequivocal family history of premature, aggressive coronary artery disease. Both the father (MI at 52) and brother (CABG at 52) had significant clinical CAD manifesting in their early 50s. This places the patient in a very high-risk category for genetic/familial predisposition. Both of the patient's children (son age 28, daughter age 24) will require early and aggressive primary prevention cardiovascular risk screening and lifestyle counseling.
- No known history of genetic disorders (e.g., Marfan syndrome, Ehlers-Danlos, familial hypercholesterolemia though lipid profiles suggest possible heterozygous FH), congenital heart diseases, or hereditary cardiomyopathies in the family.
FAMILY COMPOSITION
| Name of Family Member | Age | Sex | Education | Occupation | Marital Status | Relationship with Patient | Health Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mr. Rajendra Prasad Sharma | 58 | M | M.Com | Bank Manager | Married | Self (Patient) | CAD — Post PTCA + DES |
| Mrs. Sunita Sharma | 52 | F | B.A. | Homemaker | Married | Wife | Healthy (Mild HTN — on low-salt diet) |
| Mr. Amit Sharma | 28 | M | MBA (Finance) | Software Engineer at TCS | Unmarried | Son | Healthy (Overweight — BMI 28; advised CVD screening) |
| Ms. Priya Sharma | 24 | F | MBBS (Final Year) | Medical Student | Unmarried | Daughter | Healthy |
FAMILY TREE
📄 Page 4 — Dietary, Personal, Socio-Economic & Environmental History
DIETARY HISTORY
- Type of Diet: Mixed, predominantly vegetarian with occasional non-vegetarian meals (chicken curry or fish fry approximately once per week).
- High-Risk Dietary Practices: The patient's diet is characteristically high in saturated fats and trans fats. He consumes full-cream buffalo milk (approximately 500mL daily in tea and as milk). Regular use of ghee (clarified butter) as topping on rotis and dal — approximately 2-3 teaspoons per meal. Deep-fried foods are consumed 3-4 times per week — pakoras (onion fritters), samosas, kachoris, and puris are regular items in his diet. He has a particular fondness for fried snacks with evening tea.
- Sodium Intake: Very high. He habitually adds extra salt to food at the table ("food tastes bland without salt"). Consumes pickles (mango, lemon) with almost every meal. Enjoys namkeen (salted Indian snacks), papad, and chips as evening snacks. Estimated daily sodium intake exceeds 4-5 grams (recommended <2 grams for cardiac patients).
- Sugar and Refined Carbohydrates: High consumption. Adds 3 teaspoons of sugar to each cup of tea (drinks 4-5 cups daily = 12-15 teaspoons of sugar/day from tea alone). Has a strong preference for sweets — rasgulla, gulab jamun, jalebi consumed 2-3 times per week. Regular consumption of white rice, white bread (refined flour), and potatoes.
- Fiber Intake: Low. Minimal consumption of fresh fruits (occasional banana or apple — not daily). Vegetable intake is moderate but often overcooked (traditional Indian cooking), which depletes fiber and nutrients. No whole grains — prefers refined wheat flour (maida) products over whole wheat. No salads in diet.
- Caffeine: High. Drinks 4-5 cups of full-cream milk tea daily. Also consumes 1-2 cups of instant coffee at office.
- Meal Timing: Irregular due to work commitments. Often skips breakfast or has only tea and biscuits. Lunch timing varies between 1:00-3:00 PM depending on meetings. Dinner is typically late — 9:30-10:30 PM. Frequently eats dinner while watching television, unaware of portion sizes.
- Fluid Intake: Adequate — approximately 2-2.5 liters per day including water, tea, coffee, and buttermilk (chaas). No history of food allergy.
PERSONAL HISTORY
- Sleep Pattern: Sleeps approximately 5-6 hours per night (11:00 PM to 5:00 AM). Reports difficulty falling asleep ("my mind keeps racing with office worries"). Sleep is often interrupted — wakes up 1-2 times to urinate (nocturia). Does not feel refreshed in the morning. No history of using sleep medications. Wife reports he snores loudly and sometimes appears to stop breathing during sleep (possible obstructive sleep apnea — undiagnosed).
- Appetite: Generally good; however, slightly reduced since the onset of angina symptoms 2 weeks ago. Reports early satiety and mild post-prandial bloating.
- Bowel Habit: Regular, once daily in the morning. Stool consistency — normal (Bristol Stool Chart Type 3-4). However, occasionally complains of constipation (hard stools) when traveling or during particularly stressful periods at work — attributed to low fiber intake and inadequate hydration during those times.
- Bladder Habit: Frequency — 6-7 times during the day, 1-2 times at night (nocturia). No dysuria, urgency, or hesitancy. Nocturia may be related to: (a) poorly controlled diabetes (osmotic diuresis from glycosuria if blood sugar exceeds renal threshold ~180 mg/dL), (b) hypertension (pressure diuresis), (c) early diabetic nephropathy (impaired renal concentrating ability).
- Habits/Addictions: (a) Smoking: Former smoker. Smoked approximately 10 cigarettes per day for 20 years (20 pack-years). Quit 2 years ago at age 56 after his brother's CABG surgery served as a "wake-up call." However, he admits to occasional "slip-ups" — 1-2 cigarettes during social gatherings or periods of high stress (approximately once every 2-3 months). He has never used any formal smoking cessation aids (nicotine replacement, bupropion, varenicline) — quit "cold turkey." (b) Alcohol: Occasional social drinker. Consumes whiskey — 2-3 standard drinks (60-90 mL) on weekends, primarily during social gatherings or dinners with colleagues. No history of binge drinking or alcohol dependence. (c) Recreational Drugs: None.
- Activity Level and Exercise: Sedentary. Occupation requires prolonged sitting — approximately 8-10 hours daily at a desk (computer work, meetings, phone calls). Commute to work is by car (30 minutes each way). Post-retirement planning was to start a walking routine, but "never got around to it." No regular exercise program. Occasionally walks in the neighborhood park on weekends but not consistent. Does not use a fitness tracker or pedometer. Hobbies are sedentary — reading newspapers, watching television (2-3 hours in the evening), playing cards with friends on weekends.
- Allergy History: No known drug allergies. No known food allergies. No history of allergic rhinitis, asthma, or eczema. Contrast dye (Iohexol) administered during angiography without any allergic reaction.
- Anthropometric Measurements: Height: 170 cm. Weight: 85 kg. BMI: 29.4 kg/m² (Overweight — Class I Obesity according to WHO Asia-Pacific guidelines: BMI ≥25 = obesity). Waist Circumference: 104 cm (Abdominal obesity — central adiposity; significantly elevated risk: ≥90 cm for South Asian males). Waist-Hip Ratio: 0.98 (substantially increased cardiovascular risk).
SOCIO-ECONOMIC HISTORY
- The patient belongs to an upper-middle-class socioeconomic background.
- Annual Family Income: Approximately ₹8,00,000 per year (₹66,000 per month) — combining the patient's bank manager salary (₹55,000/month) and the son's contribution as a software engineer (₹25,000/month). The patient is the primary breadwinner.
- Health Insurance: Covered under the Central Government Health Scheme (CGHS) as a public sector bank employee. Additionally has a private family floater health insurance policy with coverage of ₹5,00,000. The PTCA procedure and hospital stay are expected to be largely covered by insurance with minimal out-of-pocket expenses.
- Financial Concerns: Despite insurance coverage, the patient expressed concern about potential loss of income during the recovery period (anticipated 2-4 weeks leave from work). He is worried about meeting household expenses, his daughter's ongoing medical education fees, and the cost of lifelong medications (particularly Clopidogrel, which is relatively expensive). The social worker was consulted for potential financial assistance programs.
- Family Dynamics: Stable, supportive nuclear family. Wife is the primary caregiver and emotional support. Son works in Bangalore but has taken leave to be with the patient. Daughter is a final-year MBBS student and serves as a valuable resource — she helps explain medical concepts to the parents in simple Hindi. Family appears cohesive and motivated to support the patient's recovery and lifestyle changes.
ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY
- Housing: The family owns a well-constructed pucca (concrete) house in a residential colony in Vaishali Nagar, Jaipur. The house has 3 bedrooms, a living room, kitchen, and 2 bathrooms. Adequate ventilation with windows in all rooms. Natural lighting is good. No dampness or mold issues.
- Cooking Fuel: Uses Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) for cooking — a clean fuel with no indoor air pollution. No exposure to biomass fuel (wood, cow dung, crop residue) which is a known cardiovascular risk factor in rural populations.
- Drinking Water: Reverse Osmosis (RO) purified water is used for drinking and cooking. Safe, potable water supply from municipal corporation.
- Sanitation: Adequate sanitation facilities — 2 bathrooms with running water, flush toilets. Personal hygiene maintained.
- Environmental Exposures: No occupational or environmental exposure to industrial chemicals, heavy metals, radiation, or air pollution beyond the general ambient air pollution in Jaipur (moderate levels of particulate matter). No history of pesticide or herbicide exposure.
- Living Environment: The house and surrounding neighborhood are clean, with access to parks, markets, and medical facilities. No major environmental health hazards identified.
📄 Page 5 & 6 — Physical Examination (Head-to-Toe)
GENERAL CONDITION
Patient is conscious, alert, and oriented to time (correctly states date and day), place (hospital, ward), and person (self and family members). He is cooperative with healthcare staff, maintains eye contact, and responds appropriately to questions. Appears mildly anxious — repeatedly asks about prognosis, stent durability, and timeline for return to work. Posture is comfortable in semi-Fowler's position (head elevated 30-45°). Personal hygiene is well-maintained. Dressed in hospital gown with right wrist dressing visible.
VITAL SIGNS (Post-Procedure Day 1 — 12/05/2026, 8:00 AM)
- Temperature: 98.6°F (37.0°C) — Afebrile, oral route
- Heart Rate/Pulse: 74 beats per minute, regular rhythm, normal volume, right radial pulse strong and equal to left
- Respiratory Rate: 16 breaths per minute, regular rhythm, normal depth, no use of accessory muscles
- Blood Pressure: 130/82 mmHg (right arm, sitting position, appropriate cuff size)
- Oxygen Saturation (SpO₂): 98% on room air (no supplemental oxygen)
- Pain Score: 0/10 chest (no chest pain); 1/10 right wrist (mild tenderness at access site only on palpation)
- Blood Sugar (Capillary): 142 mg/dL (fasting — pre-breakfast check)
GENERAL APPEARANCE
- Body Build: Endomorphic — stocky build with central obesity (pot-belly appearance)
- Posture: Comfortable, resting semi-recumbent; right wrist kept extended and still
- Activity Level: On bed rest as per post-PCI protocol; can move left arm and both legs freely; right wrist immobilized
- Speech: Clear, coherent, normal rate and volume; speaks Hindi fluently with some English; anxious undertone
- Signs of Distress: Mild anxiety evident (furrowed brow, occasional sighing, repeated questions); no acute distress (no grimacing, no diaphoresis, no tachypnea)
- Facial Expression: Anxious but hopeful; smiles when family is present
SYSTEMIC EXAMINATION — HEAD TO TOE
| Head and Scalp | Normocephalic; no lesions, lumps, or tenderness. Scalp clean with normal hair distribution. Mild greying of hair consistent with age. No dandruff or seborrheic dermatitis. |
| Face | Facial expression anxious. Facial symmetry maintained bilaterally. No facial puffiness or edema. No acne or skin lesions. |
| Eyes | Eyebrows normal; eyelashes present. Conjunctiva: Pale pink (mild pallor). Sclera: White, no icterus. Cornea clear. Pupils: Equal (3mm bilaterally), round, reactive to light (direct and consensual). Extraocular movements intact. Vision: Grossly normal (wears reading glasses +2.0D for presbyopia). Fundoscopy: Not performed (no clinical indication). Xanthelasma: Present bilaterally on upper eyelids — soft, yellowish, flat plaques on the medial aspects, pathognomonic of chronic dyslipidemia. |
| Ears | Pinnae normal shape and position bilaterally. No pre-auricular or post-auricular tenderness, swelling, or lesions. External auditory canals clear. Tympanic membranes intact and pearly grey (not formally examined). Hearing: Grossly intact — patient responds to normal conversational voice at 1 meter. No tinnitus or vertigo. |
| Nose and Sinuses | External nose normal. Nostrils patent bilaterally. No nasal discharge, crusting, or polyps visible. Nasal septum midline. No sinus tenderness on palpation over frontal or maxillary sinuses. No nasal flaring (absence of respiratory distress). |
| Mouth and Oral Cavity | Lips: Pale pink, moist, no cyanosis, no angular cheilitis. Oral mucosa: Pink and moist. No ulcers, leukoplakia, or lesions. Gingivae: Pink, no bleeding or hypertrophy. Teeth: Partial dentition; missing molars bilaterally in lower jaw; uses upper partial denture (currently removed). Tongue: Pink, moist, no coating, no fasciculations. Oropharynx: Not congested; uvula midline; tonsils not enlarged. No halitosis. |
| Neck | Supple, full range of motion (flexion, extension, rotation, lateral bending) without pain. Thyroid gland: Not enlarged, no nodules palpable. Trachea: Midline. Lymph Nodes: No cervical, supraclavicular, or submandibular lymphadenopathy. Carotid arteries: Palpable bilaterally with normal volume; no bruits on auscultation. Jugular Venous Pressure (JVP): Not elevated — measured at 3 cm above sternal angle at 45° (normal <4 cm). |
| Chest and Lungs | Inspection: Chest symmetrical, normal anteroposterior diameter. Respiratory rate 16/min, regular, normal depth. No use of accessory muscles. No intercostal retractions. Palpation: Trachea midline. Chest expansion symmetrical — 4 cm on deep inspiration. Tactile fremitus normal and equal bilaterally. Percussion: Resonant throughout both lung fields. No dullness. Auscultation: Vesicular breath sounds heard clearly over both lungs. No adventitious sounds — no crackles (crepitations), wheezes, or rhonchi. Bronchophony, egophony, and whispered pectoriloquy — normal (no consolidation). |
| Cardiovascular System | Inspection: Precordium normal; no visible pulsations; PMI not visible. Palpation: PMI (Point of Maximum Impulse) palpable in the 5th intercostal space at the mid-clavicular line — normal position. No parasternal heave. No thrills palpable. Auscultation: S1 (first heart sound) — normal intensity, heard best at apex. S2 (second heart sound) — normal intensity, physiological splitting on inspiration heard at pulmonary area. No S3 (third heart sound) — absence is normal post-PCI. No S4 (fourth heart sound) — absence is reassuring (no stiff ventricle). No murmurs (systolic or diastolic). No pericardial friction rub. No gallop rhythm. Heart Rate: 74/min, regular rhythm. Blood Pressure: 130/82 mmHg (controlled on medications). Peripheral Pulses: Radial — strong, equal bilaterally; Brachial — strong; Carotid — normal volume, no bruits; Femoral — strong; Popliteal — strong; Dorsalis Pedis — palpable, equal bilaterally; Posterior Tibial — palpable, equal bilaterally. Capillary Refill Time: <2 seconds in both hands and feet (normal). No peripheral edema. No calf tenderness (Homan's sign negative bilaterally — rules out DVT). |
| Abdomen | Inspection: Abdomen protuberant (obese) but symmetrical. Umbilicus inverted. No visible scars (no previous surgery), dilated veins (caput medusae), or visible peristalsis. Palpation: Soft, non-tender in all four quadrants. No guarding or rigidity. Liver: Not palpable below the right costal margin. Spleen: Not palpable. Kidneys: Not ballotable. No masses felt. Percussion: Tympanic note over most of abdomen (gas-filled bowel). Liver span: 10 cm at the right mid-clavicular line (normal). Auscultation: Bowel sounds present — approximately 8-10 per minute, normal pitch and intensity. No bruits over aorta, renal, or iliac arteries. |
| Genitourinary | Not formally examined. Patient reports normal voiding pattern. Urine output monitored via urinal/bedside commode: Approximately 60-80 mL/hour (adequate; >0.5 mL/kg/hour). Urine appears clear, pale yellow. No dysuria, hematuria, or urgency reported. |
| Musculoskeletal | Right upper limb: Wrist immobilized per post-radial access protocol; able to move fingers (flexion, extension, abduction, adduction) fully without pain. Left upper limb: Normal range of motion, strength 5/5 in all muscle groups. Both lower limbs: Normal range of motion, strength 5/5. No joint swelling, deformity, or tenderness. Spine: Normal curvature; no tenderness on vertebral palpation. |
| Integumentary (Skin) | Skin color: Pale pink (mild pallor). No cyanosis (lips, nail beds, skin). No icterus. No clubbing (nail bed angle <180°, Schamroth's window test positive). No edema. Skin warm, dry (no diaphoresis). Turgor: Normal (returns within 2 seconds on forearm). No rashes, lesions, petechiae, purpura, or ecchymosis. Xanthelasma: Present bilaterally on upper eyelids (as noted in Eye examination). Right Wrist Access Site: TR Band (radial compression device) in situ. Site clean, dry. No active bleeding, oozing, or hematoma. Distal right hand warm, pink, capillary refill <2 seconds. |
| Neurological | Consciousness: Alert, awake. Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS): 15/15 (E4 V5 M6). Orientation: Oriented to time (correct date/day), place (hospital), and person (self, family). Speech: Fluent, coherent, normal rate. Cranial Nerves: Grossly intact (II-XII). Motor: Normal tone and power (5/5) in all four limbs (except right wrist immobilized). Sensory: Grossly intact to light touch and pinprick in all extremities. Coordination: Finger-to-nose and heel-to-shin tests normal (performed on left side). Gait: Not tested currently (bed rest). Reflexes: Deep tendon reflexes (biceps, triceps, brachioradialis, patellar, ankle) — 2+ bilaterally, symmetrical. Plantar response: Flexor bilaterally (Babinski sign negative — normal). No meningeal signs (neck supple, Kernig and Brudzinski signs negative). |
| Psychological/Mental Status | Alert and fully oriented. Mood: Anxious but cooperative. Affect: Appropriate to situation. Thought process: Logical, coherent. Thought content: Preoccupied with stent durability, medication adherence, and timeline for returning to work. No delusions, hallucinations, or suicidal ideation. Insight: Good — understands the seriousness of CAD and the need for lifelong secondary prevention. However, demonstrates some denial about the extent of necessary lifestyle changes ("Can I eat normal food from now on?"). Judgment: Intact — makes reasoned decisions about care. |
📄 Page 7 — Vital Signs Monitoring Record
| DATE/TIME | TEMP (°F) | PULSE (/min) | RESP (/min) | BP (mmHg) | SpO₂ (%) | PAIN (0-10) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10/05/2026 — 9:00 AM (Pre-procedure) | 98.4°F | 78/min | 18/min | 148/92 | 97% | 2/10 (angina) |
| 11/05/2026 — 8:00 AM (Day of PTCA) | 98.2°F | 76/min | 16/min | 144/90 | 98% | 1/10 |
| 11/05/2026 — 11:00 AM (Post-PTCA — CCU) | 98.8°F | 72/min | 16/min | 126/78 | 98% | 1/10 (wrist) |
| 12/05/2026 — 8:00 AM (POD 1) | 98.6°F | 74/min | 16/min | 130/82 | 98% | 0/10 |
| 13/05/2026 — 8:00 AM (POD 2 — Discharge) | 98.6°F | 72/min | 16/min | 128/80 | 99% | 0/10 |
📄 Page 8 — Diagnostic Investigations
| SR. | INVESTIGATION | NORMAL VALUE | PATIENT VALUE | INTERPRETATION |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hemoglobin | 13-17 g/dL | 13.8 g/dL | Normal |
| 2 | Total WBC Count | 4,000-11,000/mm³ | 7,200/mm³ | Normal |
| 3 | Platelet Count | 1.5-4.0 lakh/mm³ | 1,98,000/mm³ | Normal (on DAPT — monitor) |
| 4 | Fasting Blood Sugar | 70-110 mg/dL | 142 mg/dL | Elevated — uncontrolled DM |
| 5 | HbA1c | <6.5% | 7.8% | Poor glycemic control |
| 6 | Serum Creatinine (Pre-procedure) | 0.7-1.3 mg/dL | 1.1 mg/dL | Normal |
| 7 | Serum Creatinine (24h Post) | 0.7-1.3 mg/dL | 1.2 mg/dL | Normal — no CIN |
| 8 | Blood Urea | 15-40 mg/dL | 32 mg/dL | Normal |
| 9 | Total Cholesterol | <200 mg/dL | 228 mg/dL | Elevated |
| 10 | LDL Cholesterol | <100 (<70 CAD) | 142 mg/dL | Critically elevated |
| 11 | HDL Cholesterol | >40 mg/dL | 34 mg/dL | Low |
| 12 | Triglycerides | <150 mg/dL | 210 mg/dL | Elevated |
| 13 | Cardiac Troponin I (HS) | <34 ng/L | 18 ng/L | Normal — no procedure-related MI |
| 14 | ECG (Pre-procedure) | ST depression V2-V6; T inversion | Anterior wall ischemia | |
| 15 | ECG (Post-PTCA) | ST segments normalized; no Q waves | Successful revascularization | |
| 16 | 2D Echocardiogram | LVEF 52%; anterior wall hypokinesia | Mild LV dysfunction | |
| 17 | Coronary Angiography | 90% stenosis proximal LAD; TIMI 3 post-stent | Single vessel CAD — treated | |
| 18 | Chest X-Ray | Normal cardiac size; clear lungs | Normal | |
📄 Page 9 — Medical Management (Drug Chart)
| SR. | MEDICATION | DOSE | FREQ | ROUTE | ACTION |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Tab. Aspirin (Acetylsalicylic Acid) | 150 mg | OD (lifelong) | Oral | Antiplatelet — irreversible COX-1 inhibition; prevents stent thrombosis |
| 2 | Tab. Clopidogrel (P2Y12 Inhibitor) | 75 mg | OD (min 12 months) | Oral | DAPT — prevents stent thrombosis; essential post-DES |
| 3 | Tab. Atorvastatin | 40 mg | OD (HS) | Oral | High-intensity statin — LDL lowering; plaque stabilization; anti-inflammatory |
| 4 | Tab. Telmisartan (ARB) | 40 mg | OD | Oral | Angiotensin receptor blocker — BP control; target <130/80 mmHg |
| 5 | Tab. Metoprolol Succinate (Beta Blocker) | 25 mg | BD | Oral | Cardioselective β1-blocker — reduces myocardial O₂ demand; heart rate control |
| 6 | Tab. Metformin (Biguanide) | 500 mg | BD | Oral | Glycemic control; insulin sensitizer; target HbA1c <7% |
| 7 | Inj. Heparin (Unfractionated) | 5,000 IU | Peri-procedural | IV | Anticoagulation during PCI; ACT-guided dosing |
| 8 | IV Normal Saline (0.9% NaCl) | 1 mL/kg/hr | 12h pre & post | IV | CIN prophylaxis — ensures adequate renal perfusion and contrast dilution |
📄 Page 10 — NANDA Nursing Diagnoses
- Risk for decreased cardiac tissue perfusion related to coronary artery disease, possible thrombus formation, coronary artery spasm, and stent thrombosis as evidenced by recent PTCA with DES deployment and ongoing risk.
- Risk for bleeding related to right radial arterial access site, dual antiplatelet therapy (Aspirin + Clopidogrel), and peri-procedural anticoagulation (Heparin) as evidenced by TR Band in situ, platelet count 1,98,000/mm³, and coagulation parameters.
- Acute pain related to arterial access site trauma, sheath insertion, and compression device (TR Band) as evidenced by patient reporting tenderness at right wrist and pain score of 1-2/10 on palpation.
- Risk for impaired renal function (Contrast-Induced Nephropathy) related to administration of 120 mL iodinated contrast media (Iohexol) during coronary angiography and PTCA, pre-existing type 2 diabetes mellitus, and hypertension as evidenced by baseline creatinine 1.1 mg/dL and eGFR 72 mL/min/1.73m² (mildly reduced).
- Anxiety related to diagnosis of coronary artery disease, invasive cardiac procedure (PTCA with stenting), fear of stent re-blockage, uncertainty about future health and prognosis, and need for lifelong medications and lifestyle modifications as evidenced by patient's repeated questioning, restlessness, expressed worry about stent, and elevated blood pressure pre-procedure.
- Deficient knowledge regarding post-PTCA care, dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) importance and duration, risk factor modification (diet, exercise, smoking cessation, stress management), medication regimen, recognition of warning signs of stent thrombosis and bleeding, and follow-up care as evidenced by patient's inability to list medications correctly, unawareness of dietary restrictions, and questions about activity resumption.
- Activity intolerance related to imbalance between myocardial oxygen supply and demand secondary to coronary artery disease, imposed bed rest post-procedure, and baseline deconditioning as evidenced by NYHA Class II symptoms, sedentary lifestyle, and need for gradual mobilization.
- Ineffective health maintenance related to inadequate management of modifiable cardiovascular risk factors (uncontrolled diabetes — HbA1c 7.8%, uncontrolled dyslipidemia — LDL 142 mg/dL, overweight — BMI 29.4, sedentary lifestyle, high-stress occupation, history of smoking, and poor dietary habits) as evidenced by progression to critical single-vessel CAD requiring invasive revascularization at age 58.
📄 Page 11-13 — Nursing Care Plans (NANDA Format)
Nursing Care Plan — 1: Risk for Decreased Cardiac Tissue Perfusion
| ASSESSMENT | NURSING DIAGNOSIS | GOAL/EXPECTED OUTCOME | PLANNING | IMPLEMENTATION | EVALUATION |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subjective: "Can the stent get blocked again?" "How long will this stent last?" Patient reports history of angina. Objective: 90% proximal LAD stenosis — now stented with DES (Sirolimus-eluting 3.0×23mm). On DAPT (Aspirin + Clopidogrel). ECG — ST segments normalized post-PCI. Troponin I — 18 ng/L (normal). Cardiac monitor — NSR, HR 74/min. | Risk for decreased cardiac tissue perfusion related to coronary artery disease, possible thrombus formation, coronary artery spasm, and stent thrombosis. | Short Term (during hospital stay): Patient will remain free from chest pain, ST-segment changes, and arrhythmias. Patient will maintain hemodynamic stability (HR 60-100, SBP 100-140). Long Term: Patient will demonstrate adequate cardiac perfusion as evidenced by no angina, normal ECG, and improved exercise tolerance on follow-up. Patient will verbalize complete understanding of DAPT compliance and consequences of premature discontinuation. | 1. Continuous cardiac monitoring — observe HR, rhythm, ST changes, arrhythmias every 15 min × 4, then per protocol. 2. Assess for chest pain every 2 hours and PRN — location, quality, radiation, severity (0-10), associated symptoms. 3. Record 12-lead ECG immediately if chest pain occurs; compare with baseline; notify cardiologist STAT. 4. Monitor vital signs per post-PCI protocol. 5. Administer antiplatelet medications STRICTLY on time — Aspirin 150mg OD, Clopidogrel 75mg OD. | 1. Continuous ECG monitoring maintained in CCU — rhythm strip documented every hour. No ST elevation or depression detected post-procedure. 2. Chest pain assessment performed q2h and documented. Patient consistently reported 0/10 chest pain throughout stay. 3. DAPT (Aspirin 150mg + Clopidogrel 75mg) administered daily at 8:00 AM exactly — never missed or delayed. Nurse double-checked administration with another RN. 4. Patient educated about DAPT — "These two blood thinners are your lifeline. Stopping them prematurely can cause sudden, fatal blockage of the stent. You must NEVER stop without consulting your cardiologist." Education repeated daily and documented. 5. Cardiac biomarkers (Troponin I) rechecked at 6 and 12 hours post-procedure — remained normal (18 and 15 ng/L). | • No chest pain reported throughout hospital stay (Pain score consistently 0/10). • ECG — Normal sinus rhythm; no ST-T wave changes; no arrhythmias on monitor. • Troponin I — 18 ng/L (normal); no procedure-related MI. • Vital signs stable — HR 72-78/min; BP 126-130/78-82 mmHg. • Patient verbalized understanding of DAPT importance on Day 1, Day 2, and at discharge — "I understand I must take Aspirin lifelong and Clopidogrel for at least 12 months. I will not stop them without asking the cardiologist." • Patient and wife demonstrated medication chart understanding. |
Nursing Care Plan — 2: Risk for Bleeding (Access Site)
| ASSESSMENT | NURSING DIAGNOSIS | GOAL/EXPECTED OUTCOME | PLANNING | IMPLEMENTATION | EVALUATION |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subjective: Patient reports mild tenderness at right wrist — "It hurts a little when I try to move my hand." Objective: 6 French right radial arterial access site. TR Band (radial compression device) in situ — patent hemostasis protocol. On DAPT (Aspirin 150mg + Clopidogrel 75mg) + received IV Heparin 5,000 IU during procedure. Platelet count — 1,98,000/mm³. Coagulation profile — within normal limits. | Risk for bleeding related to right radial arterial access site, dual antiplatelet therapy (Aspirin + Clopidogrel), and peri-procedural anticoagulation (Heparin). | Short Term: Right radial access site will remain free from bleeding, hematoma formation, pseudoaneurysm, or arteriovenous fistula during hospital stay. TR Band removal will occur at 6 hours without complications. Long Term: Right radial artery will remain patent. Patient will demonstrate knowledge of bleeding precautions and signs/symptoms to report after discharge. | 1. Assess radial access site every 15 min × 4, every 30 min × 2, every 1 hour × 4, then every 4 hours — check for bleeding, oozing, hematoma. 2. Mark hematoma borders with skin marker if bleeding noted; measure circumference; document size and time. 3. Maintain patent hemostasis with TR Band — ensure radial pulse palpable (or Doppler-positive) while compression maintained. 4. Assess right hand neurovascular status with each site check — color, temperature, capillary refill, sensation, movement, pain. 5. Keep right wrist straight and immobilized for 6 hours; avoid flexion, rotation; keep arm elevated on pillow. | 1. Access site assessed per protocol — site remained clean, dry, and stable throughout. No active bleeding, oozing, or hematoma development at any time. 2. TR Band maintained with patent hemostasis — right radial pulse remained strong and palpable (2+) throughout compression period. Doppler confirmation done every hour — signal positive. 3. Right hand neurovascular assessment: Color — Pink; Temperature — Warm; Capillary refill — <2 seconds; Sensation — Normal (able to feel light touch); Movement — Full range of finger motion; Pain — 0-1/10 at rest. 4. TR Band removed at 6 hours post-procedure (5:00 PM) per protocol — patent hemostasis achieved. Small adhesive dressing applied. Site inspected — no bleeding, hematoma, or swelling. 5. Patient educated: "Keep this dressing clean and dry for 24 hours. You can shower after 24 hours but avoid scrubbing the site. No heavy lifting (>5 kg) with right arm for 1 week. Report any swelling, redness, severe pain, or bleeding immediately." | • TR Band removed at 6 hours without complications — patent hemostasis confirmed. • No bleeding, oozing, hematoma, pseudoaneurysm, or AV fistula developed at access site. • Right radial pulse remained strong and equal to left throughout hospital stay. • Right hand neurovascular status — consistently normal (warm, pink, CRT <2 sec, full sensation and movement). • Patient demonstrated understanding of access site care instructions: "I will not lift heavy things with this hand for one week. I will keep the bandage on for 24 hours." |
Nursing Care Plan — 3: Deficient Knowledge
| ASSESSMENT | NURSING DIAGNOSIS | GOAL/EXPECTED OUTCOME | PLANNING | IMPLEMENTATION | EVALUATION |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subjective: "How long do I need to take these blood thinners?" "Can the stent get blocked again?" "Can I eat normal food now?" "When can I return to work?" "Is it safe to have sex after a stent?" "Doctor, I have a sweet tooth — can I never eat sweets again?" Objective: Unable to list medications correctly. Unaware of dietary restrictions (specifically salt and saturated fat limits). Uncertain about activity restrictions and timeline for returning to work. Multiple knowledge gaps identified during initial nursing assessment. Patient is educated (graduate degree) but lacks health literacy regarding cardiac disease. | Deficient knowledge regarding post-PTCA care, dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT), risk factor modification (diet, exercise, smoking cessation, stress management), medication regimen, and recognition of warning signs of stent thrombosis and bleeding. | Short Term (within 3 structured teaching sessions): Patient will verbalize understanding of: (a) All 6 discharge medications — names, doses, timings, purposes, side effects; (b) DAPT — Aspirin lifelong, Clopidogrel minimum 12 months, NEVER stop without cardiologist approval; (c) Cardiac diet principles — low salt, low fat; (d) Activity restrictions and gradual exercise plan; (e) Warning signs requiring immediate medical attention. Long Term: Patient will demonstrate correct medication administration at home using pill box and alarms. Patient will adopt heart-healthy lifestyle and attend cardiac rehabilitation. | 1. Assess readiness to learn; identify barriers (anxiety, language, education level, cultural beliefs). 2. Prepare written medication schedule in Hindi and English with large font. 3. Plan 3 structured teaching sessions: Session 1 (POD 0 — evening) — Medications and DAPT; Session 2 (POD 1) — Diet and Lifestyle; Session 3 (POD 2 — before discharge) — Warning signs, activity, follow-up, cardiac rehab. 4. Use teach-back method — ask patient to explain in his own words what he has learned. | 1. Teaching Session 1 (POD 0): Explained all 6 discharge medications with written schedule. Emphasized DAPT — "Aspirin and Clopidogrel are your lifelines. Stopping them can cause the stent to suddenly block — this can be fatal." Used simple Hindi — "Yeh davaiyan aapke stent ko khula rakhti hain. Inhe band karne se stent band ho sakta hai — jaan ko khatra ho sakta hai." Wife included in teaching. 2. Teaching Session 2 (POD 1): Dietary education — low salt (<2g/day — "chai ka chammach bhar namak se kam"), low saturated fat; provided list of DO's and DON'Ts in Hindi. Discussed complete smoking cessation. Taught relaxation techniques — deep breathing exercise practiced with patient. 3. Teaching Session 3 (POD 2 — discharge day): Reviewed all previous content. Taught warning signs: "108 par phone karein agar: Seene mein dard ho, saans phool jaaye, stool kaala ho, peshaab mein khoon aaye, ya kalai par soojan badh jaaye." Discussed gradual return to activity, sexual activity (safe after 1-2 weeks if asymptomatic), return to work (2-4 weeks desk job). Provided cardiac rehab enrollment information. | • Patient correctly named all 6 discharge medications with doses and timings at discharge. • Patient verbalized: "Aspirin lifelong leni hai, Clopidogrel kam se kam 12 mahine. Inhe doctor ki salah ke bina kabhi band nahi karna." • Patient independently listed 5 dietary modifications: "Namak kam, ghee-butter nahi, taley huye khane nahi, phal-sabzi zyada, mithai kam." • Patient verbalized 4 warning signs correctly — chest pain, black stools, sudden severe headache, wrist swelling. • Patient confirmed cardiac rehab enrollment and 2-week follow-up appointment. • Wife demonstrated ability to read medication chart and assist patient with pill box organization. |
📄 Page 14 — Discharge Summary
Mr. Rajendra Prasad Sharma, a 58-year-old male bank manager with multiple cardiovascular risk factors (hypertension ×10 years, type 2 diabetes mellitus ×5 years, dyslipidemia, ex-smoker, overweight BMI 29.4, sedentary lifestyle, strong family history of premature CAD), presented with a 2-week history of progressive crescendo angina (CCS Class II-III) and dyspnea on exertion (NYHA Class II). ECG revealed anterior wall ischemia (ST depression V2-V6). 2D Echocardiogram showed mildly reduced LVEF (52%) with anterior wall hypokinesia. Coronary angiography via right radial approach on 11/05/2026 revealed critical single-vessel CAD — 90% tubular, eccentric, calcified (Type B2) stenosis in the proximal LAD artery. RCA and LCx showed only mild non-obstructive disease. Same-sitting ad-hoc PTCA with Drug-Eluting Stent (DES — Sirolimus-eluting, 3.0 × 23 mm) was successfully deployed with excellent angiographic result (<5% residual stenosis, TIMI 3 flow). The procedure was uncomplicated — no dissection, no side branch occlusion, no no-reflow, no arrhythmia. Total contrast: 120 mL Iohexol. TR Band applied with patent hemostasis protocol. The patient was monitored in CCU for 24 hours post-procedure.
Hospital course was uneventful. The patient remained hemodynamically stable throughout — no chest pain, no ECG changes, no arrhythmias, no bleeding or hematoma at access site, no contrast-induced nephropathy (creatinine stable at 1.1→1.2→1.1 mg/dL). TR Band removed at 6 hours with patent hemostasis. Right hand neurovascularly intact. The patient was gradually mobilized starting Day 1. He received comprehensive nursing education over 3 structured teaching sessions covering DAPT, cardiac diet, lifestyle modification, smoking cessation, warning signs, cardiac rehabilitation, and follow-up care. The patient and his wife (primary caregiver) demonstrated understanding of all discharge instructions. He is being discharged on Post-Procedure Day 2 (13/05/2026) in stable condition on guideline-directed medical therapy including DAPT (Aspirin 150mg OD lifelong + Clopidogrel 75mg OD for minimum 12 months), high-intensity statin (Atorvastatin 40mg OD HS), beta-blocker (Metoprolol 25mg BD), ARB (Telmisartan 40mg OD), and antidiabetic medication (Metformin 500mg BD). He has been enrolled in the Phase II outpatient cardiac rehabilitation program with first cardiologist follow-up in 2 weeks.
At discharge, the patient is STRONGLY advised to:
- NEVER STOP Aspirin or Clopidogrel without explicit written approval from your cardiologist. Premature DAPT discontinuation is the #1 cause of stent thrombosis, which carries a 20-40% risk of death. If any other doctor, dentist, or surgeon suggests stopping these medications, you must FIRST consult your cardiologist.
- Take ALL medications exactly as prescribed, at the same time every day. Use a weekly pill box organizer (provided at discharge). Set mobile phone alarms for medication timings. Keep an updated Medication Card in your wallet at all times listing all your drugs, doses, and timings.
- Follow strict cardiac diet: LOW SALT (<2 grams sodium per day — approximately 1 level teaspoon). Remove salt shaker from dining table. Avoid pickles, papad, namkeen, chips, canned foods, and processed foods. LOW SATURATED FAT — avoid ghee, butter, full-cream milk, red meat, organ meats, fried foods, bakery products. INCREASE: Fruits (2 servings/day), vegetables (3 servings/day), whole grains, fish (2-3 times/week), nuts (handful daily — almonds, walnuts). Use mustard oil or olive oil for cooking.
- Complete and permanent smoking cessation — ZERO tobacco in any form. Avoid passive smoking. If you have cravings or difficulty, contact the smoking cessation helpline or clinic.
- Limit alcohol — ideally complete cessation. If unavoidable, MAXIMUM 1 small drink (30mL whiskey) on occasion, not more than twice a week, and never with medications.
- Start walking — begin with 5-10 minute slow walks on level ground, 2-3 times daily. Gradually increase duration by 5 minutes each week. After 2 weeks, you can increase pace to brisk walking. Attend the Phase II Cardiac Rehabilitation program (enrollment completed; first session scheduled).
- No heavy weightlifting (>5 kilograms) with the right arm for 1 week. No driving for 48 hours after discharge. No strenuous exercise or vigorous sports for 1 week.
- Sexual activity can be resumed when you feel comfortable — usually 1-2 weeks after the procedure if you can climb 2 flights of stairs without chest pain or shortness of breath. Use less strenuous positions initially. Avoid heavy meals and alcohol before intercourse.
- Return to work — your desk job as a bank manager can be resumed after 2 weeks if you are asymptomatic and your cardiologist approves. Start with half-days if possible for the first week. Avoid excessive stress; delegate tasks; take regular breaks.
- Monitor your blood pressure at home — check 2-3 times per week and maintain a written log. Target BP: less than 130/80 mmHg.
- Monitor your blood sugar — check fasting and 2 hours after meals at least twice weekly. Maintain a log. Target fasting: 80-130 mg/dL; post-prandial: <180 mg/dL; HbA1c: <7.0%.
- Keep ALL follow-up appointments: First cardiologist visit at 2 weeks after discharge for medication review and symptom assessment. Blood tests (lipid profile, HbA1c, renal function) at 4-6 weeks after discharge. 2D Echocardiogram at 3 months to reassess LVEF and heart function. Treadmill Test (TMT/Stress Test) at 6 months to assess exercise capacity and residual ischemia. Annual comprehensive cardiac check-up lifelong.
- Get a dental check-up and maintain good oral hygiene — gum disease can affect heart health.
- Get your annual influenza vaccine and one-time pneumococcal vaccine (as recommended for cardiac patients).
- Your children (son age 28, daughter age 24) should undergo cardiovascular risk screening — lipid profile, blood sugar, blood pressure, and lifestyle counseling — given the strong family history of premature CAD.
- 🚨 CALL 108 (AMBULANCE) IMMEDIATELY AND GO TO THE NEAREST EMERGENCY ROOM IF YOU EXPERIENCE: (1) Chest pain or discomfort at rest lasting more than 5 minutes — especially if similar to your previous angina but not relieved by Sorbitrate. (2) Sudden shortness of breath or difficulty breathing. (3) Black, tarry stools (like coal tar) or vomiting blood or blood in urine — signs of internal bleeding from blood thinners. (4) Sudden severe headache with weakness or numbness on one side of the body, difficulty speaking, or vision changes — signs of stroke. (5) Rapidly expanding swelling, severe pain, or coldness at the right wrist access site. (6) Fever above 100.4°F (38°C) with chills. DO NOT DRIVE YOURSELF TO THE HOSPITAL — call an ambulance. Carry your Medication Card with you to the emergency room.
📄 Page 15 — Health Education (Detailed)
1. Medication Compliance (MOST CRITICAL — Life-Saving): The patient was emphatically educated — using simple, unambiguous Hindi supplemented with English medical terminology — that NEVER STOPPING Aspirin or Clopidogrel is THE single most important action he can take to prevent sudden, catastrophic stent thrombosis and death. The nurse stated clearly: "Aapka stent ek বিদেশी चीज है — aapki body iske upar blood clot banana chahti hai. Aspirin aur Clopidogrel yeh clotting rokti hain. Agar aapne yeh davaiyan band kar di, toh stent ke andar अचानक खून का थक्का (clot) ban sakta hai — isse stent पूरी तरह बंद हो जाता है, aur बहुत बड़ा heart attack aa sakta hai. Aise cases mein 100 mein se 20-40 logon ki मौत हो जाती है. Isliye, बिना cardiologist की सलाह के — chahe koi aur doctor bole, dentist bole, surgeon bole — yeh davaiyan KABHI BAND NAHI KARNI."
The patient was provided with a written medication schedule in large-font Hindi and English: Aspirin 150mg — 1 tablet सुबह नाश्ते के बाद (lifelong). Clopidogrel 75mg — 1 tablet सुबह नाश्ते के बाद (कम से कम 12 महीने). Atorvastatin 40mg — 1 tablet रात को सोते समय (lifelong). Telmisartan 40mg — 1 tablet सुबह (lifelong). Metoprolol 25mg — 1 tablet सुबह + 1 tablet शाम (lifelong). Metformin 500mg — 1 tablet सुबह खाने के बाद + 1 tablet रात खाने के बाद (lifelong). He was given a weekly pill box organizer and taught how to fill it every Sunday evening for the upcoming week. He was advised to set recurring mobile phone alarms at 8:00 AM and 8:00 PM for medication reminders. He was given a Medication Card (wallet-sized, laminated) listing all medications, doses, timings, allergies (none), and emergency contact numbers. He was instructed to show this card to any doctor, dentist, or healthcare provider before any procedure or treatment.
2. Dietary Advice (Cardiac Diet): The dietary counseling session (conducted with the patient and his wife, who is the primary cook at home) focused on practical, culturally-relevant modifications to their traditional Indian diet. DO's: (a) Use mustard oil (sarson ka tel) or olive oil for cooking — limit to 3-4 teaspoons per day total. (b) Eat at least 2 different fruits daily — banana, apple, papaya, pomegranate, orange (seasonal, affordable). (c) Eat at least 3 servings of vegetables daily — especially green leafy vegetables (palak, methi, sarson ka saag — cooked with minimal oil), lauki (bottle gourd), tori (ridge gourd), bhindi (okra — baked or shallow-fried, not deep-fried). (d) Switch from white rice and white bread to whole wheat roti, brown rice, oats, dalia (broken wheat), jowar, bajra. (e) Eat fish (especially oily fish — salmon, mackerel, sardines) 2-3 times per week — grilled, baked, or curried with minimal oil (not fried). (f) Eat a handful of nuts (almonds — 5-6, walnuts — 2-3) daily as a snack — unsalted, not fried. (g) Use skimmed or double-toned milk instead of full-cream buffalo milk for tea and drinking. (h) Drink plenty of water — 8-10 glasses per day. DON'Ts: (a) STOP adding extra salt to food at the table — REMOVE the salt shaker from the dining table entirely. (b) STOP eating fried foods — pakoras, samosas, kachoris, puris, bhajiyas. If occasional craving, use air-fryer or bake instead of deep-frying (though best to avoid entirely). (c) STOP using ghee and butter as toppings on rotis, dal, rice. Use a few drops of mustard oil if needed for flavor. (d) AVOID full-cream milk and full-cream milk products — paneer made from full-cream milk, khoya, condensed milk sweets. (e) AVOID red meat (mutton, beef, pork) and organ meats (liver, kidney — kaleji, gurda). (f) AVOID processed and packaged foods — biscuits, cookies, chips, namkeen, instant noodles, frozen foods — these are loaded with hidden salt, sugar, and trans fats. (g) AVOID bakery products — cakes, pastries, breads made with refined flour (maida), butter, and sugar. (h) LIMIT sugar and sweets — if craving, eat a small piece of dark chocolate (>70% cocoa) or a date instead of rasgulla/gulab jamun. Use jaggery (gud) in very small amounts instead of refined sugar — but still limit total sugar intake.
3. Lifestyle Modification: (a) Smoking Cessation: "Aapne do saal pehle cigarette chhod di thi — yeh bahut accha decision tha. Lekin occasionally social situations mein 1-2 cigarette bhi khatarnak hai. Complete ZERO tolerance — ek bhi cigarette nahi, kabhi nahi." Advised to avoid situations, people, and places that trigger the urge to smoke. If cravings occur, use nicotine gum (available over-the-counter at pharmacies) or consult the smoking cessation clinic. Family members who smoke were counseled to quit or never smoke near the patient. (b) Alcohol: Advised complete cessation. If absolute social necessity, maximum 1 small drink (30mL) once in a while — never with medications, never on an empty stomach. (c) Sleep: Advised to maintain a regular sleep schedule — sleep at 10:00 PM, wake at 6:00 AM (8 hours). Practice sleep hygiene — no tea/coffee after 4:00 PM, no screen time (TV, mobile) for 1 hour before bed, keep the bedroom cool, dark, and quiet. If sleep difficulties persist, consult the doctor for evaluation of possible obstructive sleep apnea (given wife's report of loud snoring and pauses in breathing). (d) Stress Management: Acknowledge that his job as a bank manager is inherently stressful. Advised to incorporate daily relaxation practices: (i) Deep breathing exercise (pranayama) — 5 minutes, 2-3 times daily (taught and practiced during hospitalization). (ii) Meditation — 10 minutes daily in the morning (guided meditation apps recommended). (iii) Light yoga or stretching — 10-15 minutes daily. (iv) Regular walking — serves dual purpose of exercise and stress reduction. (v) Hobbies — encouraged to resume or develop hobbies (reading, light gardening, music) as a positive distraction from work stress.
4. Exercise and Activity: The principles of gradual, progressive cardiac rehabilitation were explained. Phase I (inpatient) was completed — bed rest → sitting in chair → walking in corridor. Phase II (outpatient supervised program) enrollment was completed. The patient was given a simple home exercise plan: Week 1-2: Walk 5-10 minutes on level ground, 2-3 times daily. Monitor perceived exertion — should be able to talk comfortably while walking (Borg Scale 11-13). Week 3-4: Increase walking duration to 15-20 minutes. Can increase pace slightly (brisk walking). Week 5-8: Walk 30 minutes daily at a brisk pace. Can incorporate light cycling (stationary bike). After 8 weeks: With cardiologist clearance, can add light resistance training (elastic bands, light dumbbells 2-3 kg) under supervision. Advised to STOP exercising immediately and rest if chest pain, shortness of breath, dizziness, palpitations, or excessive fatigue occur. Advised to avoid heavy weightlifting (>10 kg), competitive sports, isometric exercises (pushing/pulling heavy objects), and exercise in extreme temperatures for at least 6 weeks.
5. Disease Awareness and Warning Signs: Explained in simple terms: "Aapke heart ki ek main blood vessel (LAD artery) mein 90% blockage thi. Humne balloon se usko खोलकर stent (एक छोटी सी जालीदार tube) डाल दी है, jo vessel को खुला रखती है। Stent के अंदर की दवाई (Sirolimus) धीरे-धीरे निकलती है और दोबारा blockage होने से रोकती है। दवाइयाँ (Aspirin + Clopidogrel) stent के अंदर खून का थक्का जमने से रोकती हैं।" Advised to recognize the warning signs of stent thrombosis (emergency — call 108): (a) Chest pain at rest lasting >5 minutes, similar to or worse than previous angina, NOT relieved by Sorbitrate. (b) Sudden shortness of breath. (c) Cold sweat, nausea, lightheadedness. Advised to recognize signs of bleeding (side effect of blood thinners — seek urgent medical attention): (a) Black, tarry, sticky stools (like coal tar — melena). (b) Vomiting of blood or coffee-ground-like material (hematemesis). (c) Blood in urine (red or cola-colored). (d) Excessive bruising or bleeding from minor cuts that does not stop. (e) Prolonged nosebleeds. Advised to recognize signs of stroke (emergency — call 108): (a) Sudden numbness or weakness of face, arm, or leg — especially on one side of the body (FAST — Face drooping, Arm weakness, Speech difficulty, Time to call ambulance). (b) Sudden confusion, trouble speaking or understanding. (c) Sudden trouble seeing in one or both eyes. (d) Sudden severe headache with no known cause.
6. Follow-up Care and Family Screening: Written follow-up schedule was provided in Hindi: (a) First cardiologist follow-up: 2 weeks after discharge — bring all medications, BP log, blood sugar log, and this discharge summary. (b) Blood tests: After 4-6 weeks — complete lipid profile (total cholesterol, LDL, HDL, triglycerides), HbA1c (glycosylated hemoglobin), fasting and post-prandial blood sugar, serum creatinine, liver function tests (SGPT, SGOT — to monitor statin effect). (c) 2D Echocardiogram: After 3 months — to reassess LVEF and regional wall motion; significant improvement is expected as stunned myocardium recovers. (d) Treadmill Test (TMT/Stress Test): After 6 months — to assess exercise capacity, heart rate and blood pressure response to exercise, and any residual ischemia. (e) Annual comprehensive cardiac check-up: Every year — cardiologist consultation, ECG, Echo, TMT, lipid profile, HbA1c, renal function, liver function. (f) Dental check-up: Within 1 month and then every 6 months — good oral hygiene reduces systemic inflammation. (g) Vaccinations: Annual influenza (flu) vaccine (before winter season) and one-time pneumococcal vaccine (as per physician recommendation for cardiac patients). (h) Family screening: Both children (son age 28, daughter age 24) were STRONGLY advised to undergo cardiovascular risk assessment — including complete lipid profile, fasting blood sugar, blood pressure measurement, body mass index calculation, and lifestyle counseling — given the strong family history of premature CAD (father MI at 52, brother CABG at 52). Early detection of risk factors and aggressive primary prevention can prevent or delay the onset of CAD in the next generation.
📄 Page 16 — Bibliography
- Brunner, L.S. & Suddarth, D.S. (2022). Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing (15th ed.). Wolters Kluwer Health. Chapter 27: Management of Patients with Coronary Vascular Disorders, pp. 752-812.
- NANDA International. (2024). Nursing Diagnoses: Definitions and Classification 2024-2026 (13th ed.). Thieme Medical Publishers, New York.
- Levine, G.N., Bates, E.R., Blankenship, J.C., et al. (2023). 2023 ACC/AHA/SCAI Guideline for Coronary Artery Revascularization: A Report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Joint Committee on Clinical Practice Guidelines. Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC), 82(4), e51-e200.
- Thygesen, K., Alpert, J.S., Jaffe, A.S., et al. (2024). Fourth Universal Definition of Myocardial Infarction. Circulation, 138(20), e618-e651. American Heart Association.
- Mauri, L., Kereiakes, D.J., Yeh, R.W., et al. (2024). Duration of Dual Antiplatelet Therapy After Drug-Eluting Stents: A Comprehensive Review of Current Evidence and Recommendations. New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), 371(23), 2155-2166.
- Mehran, R., Dangas, G.D., & Weisbord, S.D. (2023). Contrast-Associated Acute Kidney Injury — Mechanisms, Risk Prediction, and Prevention. New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), 380(22), 2146-2155.
- Doenges, M.E., Moorhouse, M.F., & Murr, A.C. (2024). Nursing Care Plans: Guidelines for Individualizing Client Care Across the Life Span (11th ed.). F.A. Davis Company, Philadelphia.
⚕️ Medical Disclaimer: This surgical nursing care plan is prepared for educational and academic purposes only as part of nursing practical file work (ANM, GNM, BSc Nursing). It is not intended for actual patient care, clinical decision-making, or medical diagnosis. Always refer to your institution's guidelines and standard textbooks.
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