Respiratory device‐related pressure injuries in hospitalised adults: An integrative review

Author:

Fidalgo De Faria Maíla1ORCID,Bontempo De Azevedo Lorena2ORCID,Faria De Oliveira Karoline3ORCID,Guimarães Raponi Maria Beatriz4ORCID,Da Silva Alves Filgueira Viviane5,Marques Dos Santos Felix Márcia1ORCID,Sagrario Gómez Cantarino Maria6,Barbosa Maria Helena7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Stricto Sensu Postgraduate Program in Health Care Federal University of Triângulo Mineiro Uberaba Brazil

2. Nursing Undergraduate Course Federal University of Triângulo Mineiro Uberaba Brazil

3. Scientific Teaching Department of Nursing in the Hospital Care of the Institute of Health Sciences Federal University of Triângulo Mineiro Uberaba Brazil

4. School of Medicine, Nursing Course Federal University of Uberlândia Uberlândia Brazil

5. Stricto Sensu Postgraduate Program in Health Care Nurse in Neurology Unit and the Infectious Parasitic Diseases Unit of the Clinic Hospital of the Federal University of Triângulo Mineiro Uberaba Brazil

6. School of Physiotherapy and Nursing University of Castilla‐La Mancha – Toledo Campus Toledo Spain

7. School of Nursing and Stricto Sensu Postgraduate Program in Health Care Federal University of Triângulo Mineiro Uberaba Brazil

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveTo identify the main ventilatory support medical devices related to the occurrence of pressure injuries in hospitalised adults, as well as the most frequent anatomical localisations of these injuries.MethodsThe Integrative review was registered at Open Science Framework as per DOI 10.17605/OSF.IO/P3NTZ. Two independent reviewers, in May 2022, searched the databases: PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, LILACS and CINAHL; no language or publication year restriction. The review question was: What are the ventilatory support medical devices that cause PIs in hospitalised adults more often? The terms for searching the database were: “adult,” “noninvasive ventilation,” “artificial respiration.” and “pressure injury,” and their synonyms. This review followed the PRISMA checklist.ResultsThe final sample was 21 articles. Oxygen nasal catheters caused up to 40.7% of the pressure injuries by ventilatory support devices identified, all in the ears. Noninvasive mechanical ventilation oronasal masks presented an incidence of pressure injuries of 63.3%. The nasal bridge was the site most affected by this mask. The Set of Holders for Insight® endotracheal tubes was the device that caused the most pressure injuries, with an incidence of 75%, affecting lip commissure. Tracheostomy cannula accounted for 18.2% of the pressure injuries related to ventilatory support devices; all lesions were in the neck.ConclusionThe ventilatory support devices causing pressure injuries and the most affected sites were, respectively, nasal catheters, ears; masks, nasal bridge; endotracheal tubes, lip commissures; tracheostomy cannulas, neck.Relevance for clinical practiceKnowing which respiratory devices cause pressure injuries more often in hospitalised adults and which anatomical localisations are more likely to be affected is fundamental for adopting preventive measures and reducing the occurrence of this problem.No patient or public contributionNo patient or public contribution because of the review.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine,General Nursing

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