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Barbara Drew, Ph.D., RN, FAAN, thought her 37-year-old
patient was recovering well after bypass leg graft surgery.
Then, without warning, the man went into shock and
died. Drew, then a clinical coronary care nurse, was
perplexed and frustrated. The autopsy revealed that
he had died of a heart attack.
For Drew, the incident only heightened her frustration
with cardiac monitors at the time. The monitor failed
to show that parts of the man's heart were dying from
oxygen deprivation. She and the medical staff couldn't
respond until it was too late.
Drew is one of many nurses who were drawn into cardiac
research by their frustrations with equipment and practices
that failed to save as many patients as possible from
serious heart complications. These nurse researchers
are battling a disease that kills one out of every 2.5
Americans, according to the American Heart Association.
Although cardiovascular disease is the nation's No.1
killer, the public more often fears conditions such
as cancer and AIDS, said Nancy Houston Miller, RN, a
member of the national board of directors of the American
Heart Association.
The organization sponsors American Heart Month every
February, and one important message people need to hear
is that heart disease is more preventable than many
forms of cancer, Houston Miller said.
Now a professor and vice chair of academic programs
in the department of physiological nursing at the UCSF
School of Nursing, Drew focuses her research on improving
the way doctors and nurses monitor patients who come
to the hospital with a heart attack.
Today's heart monitors, or electrocardiograms, which
provide continuous readings, are limited to data from
one to two leads. The leads are able to monitor only
a small portion of a patient's heart for inadequate
blood supply, but this part of the heart may be functioning
fine while another section is struggling.
New model
Drew's research project, funded by the National Institutes
of Health, aims to invent a monitor that tracks a larger
portion of a patient's heart. She's working on a new
model that provides data as if a patient had 192 leads.
In fact, the patient would have only 10 leads, but the
machine would use a small number of electrodes to estimate
the status of other parts of the heart.
If hospitals someday can use more sensitive monitors,
nurses will enjoy a greater sense of control, she said.
"From a nursing standpoint, it's a practical solution,"
Drew said. "The machine won't interfere with the
patient's movement, and we will feel better about sending
patients home instead of worrying that they will have
a big heart attack."
New monitors ideally would prevent inappropriate admissions,
which are expensive for hospitals, Drew said. She also
hopes her device will help clinicians divide people
into high-risk vs. low-risk groups for heart disease.
Barbara Medoff-Cooper, Ph.D., RN, also has dedicated
herself to heart research, but her study zeroes in on
much smaller, younger hearts: those of infants. Infants
who have undergone major heart surgery often struggle
with feeding, and Medoff-Cooper is eager to learn why
these babies have trouble nursing.
Disturbed feeding behaviors can increase a baby's risk
of neuralgic damage, which can result in a lower-than-average
IQ later in life, said Medoff-Cooper, director for the
Center for Nursing Research at University of Pennsylvania.
Her research is directed at helping infants get the
nutrition they need to avoid developmental delays later
in life.
So far, she's conducted a pilot study that documented
the feeding behaviors of babies who were full-term and
had feeding problems after heart surgery. Healthy babies
develop a rhythm of feeding with sucking and pausing.
But the babies in her study weren't able to suck for
a long period of time, Medoff-Cooper said.
"It may be that the feeding is a lot of work,
and feeding may be too difficult after surgery,"
she said.
In the next phase of the study, researchers will experiment
with things such as changing nipple flow rates to determine
whether this helps the babies eat more. If the study
obtains funding, the team will examine 120 infants who
have undergone serious cardiac surgery in their first
month of life.
Lifestyle changes
Barbara Riegel, DNSc, RN, is taking a different tack
in the effort to improve cardiac care. She's trying
to understand how to help heart failure patients care
for themselves-and therefore avoid repeat visits to
the hospital.
Riegel, a professor at the San Diego State University
School of Nursing, said patients typically struggle
to change their lifestyles because they don't grasp
the direct correlation between their lifestyle choices
and their heart's health.
"The reason why it's so challenging is because
the things we tell people to do seem stupid to them,"
Riegel said. "We may tell them to weigh themselves
every day, but they don't understand why it's important."
A sudden increase in weight can be a signal that someone
ate too much salt, and the patient's body is heavier
as a result of the extra water he or she drank after
a salty meal.
The extra fluid in the body can make this person's
heart work harder to pump. Some of these patients may
feel fluid buildup in their lungs, which can give them
a sense of drowning when they lie down at night to sleep,
Riegel said.
Riegel is working to design programs in which heart
failure patients can learn physiologic subtleties, such
as the relationship between a salty Chinese meal and
the "drowning" sensation.
One of the patterns she's discovered is that patients
are more successful with self-care if a nurse follows
up with a weekly phone call for the first six months
to check in on how they are doing. Patients can ask
questions and receive personalized answers.
"The patients really love the nurses calling them
because they feel like somebody really cares and will
help them integrate these things into their lives,"
Riegel said.
She's also found that female patients often don't understand
that heart disease is the leading cause of death for
women, not just men. Women also dismiss the importance
of lifestyle changes to help their hearts because heart
disease typically affects women later in life than other
diseases such as breast cancer, Riegel said.
Early prevention
Patricia Liehr, Ph.D., RN, also believes that one of
the best weapons to battle the heart disease epidemic
is to intervene with lifestyle changes, but she's eager
to see those changes start earlier in patients' lives.
Now, doctors usually wait until patients have a heart
attack until they advise them to change their diet and
exercise habits, said Liehr, an associate professor
at the University of Texas-Houston Health Science Center
School of Nursing.
Liehr is involved in a project that works with patients
when they first develop Stage 1 hypertension. Like Riegel,
she's found that patients are more likely to implement
lifestyle changes when the treatment is personalized.
Patients had the best results when they received what
she calls story-centered care. This included four meetings
with patients in which she talked to them about situations
in their families and jobs that could prevent them from
taking care of themselves.
For example, if a patient had a stressful job situation
that included frequent confrontations, they would discuss
options such as quitting their job. If that were not
feasible, Liehr would help the patient learn to understand
the way his or her body physically manifests signals
of increased blood pressure, such as head pressure or
tingling in the ears. She would teach the patient that
this is a sign that he or she needs to find an excuse
to leave the confrontation, such as going to the bathroom
to calm down.
"Many people need to understand their bodies better,
and I teach them to connect with themselves," Liehr
said. "I try to show them that they are allowed
to make choices."
Liehr said that nurses likely will have a key role
in working with Stage 1 hypertension patients if early
intervention becomes common practice in hospitals.
Even as these nurse researchers pursue better prevention
techniques, they admit that they face a formidable foe.
Heart failure is the leading cause of hospitalization
in the United States and the numbers are only increasing,
Houston Miller said.
The American Heart Association's goal is to reduce
cardiovascular disease, stroke and those at risk by
25 percent by 2010.
"My hope is that eventually we'd be able to abolish
cardiovascular disease like other diseases, and I think
we're hopefully headed in that direction," she
said. "The more research that can be done in the
area of prevention, the greater the likelihood that
we will succeed."
Contact Heather Stringer at heathers@nurseweek.com
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