Chart — Perioperative Nursing
Postoperative Complication Recognition
Major postoperative complications at a glance — key findings, risk factors, onset timing, and immediate nursing actions for hemorrhage, DVT, PE, atelectasis, pneumonia, surgical site infection, wound dehiscence, and evisceration.
Educational use only. Complication management requires provider notification and individualized clinical judgment. This chart is a reference for early recognition — never substitute clinical judgment or institutional protocols. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.
Hemorrhage
Hours 0–24 (primary/reactionary); Days 5–10 (secondary)CRITICALKey Findings
- ✦Tachycardia — FIRST sign
- ✦Hypotension — LATE (life-threatening)
- ✦Restlessness, anxiety (early — often mistaken for pain)
- ✦Pallor, cool/clammy skin
- ✦Increasing bright red wound/drain output
- ✦Decreased urine output
- ✦Confusion (late)
Risk Factors
- ·Anticoagulant use pre-op
- ·Coagulopathy
- ·Vascular surgery
- ·Uncontrolled hypertension
- ·Missed preop medication hold
Immediate Nursing Actions
- 1.Apply direct pressure to wound if accessible
- 2.Notify surgeon STAT
- 3.Increase IV fluid rate per order
- 4.Type and crossmatch if not done
- 5.Continuous vital sign monitoring
- 6.Prepare for return to OR
- 7.Do NOT leave patient alone
Deep Vein Thrombosis (DVT)
Days 1–10 postoperativelyURGENTKey Findings
- ✦Unilateral calf/leg pain and tenderness
- ✦Localized warmth and erythema
- ✦Unilateral swelling (pitting edema)
- ✦Low-grade fever
- ✦Positive Homans sign (unreliable — use with caution)
Risk Factors
- ·Immobility (surgical)
- ·Prolonged OR time (>1 hour)
- ·Prior DVT/PE history
- ·Obesity
- ·Malignancy
- ·SCDs not applied or removed early
Immediate Nursing Actions
- 1.Notify provider — do NOT massage or rub affected extremity
- 2.Bed rest until further order (debated — follow current institutional protocol)
- 3.Doppler ultrasound to confirm diagnosis
- 4.Anticoagulation per order (heparin/enoxaparin)
- 5.Assess for PE symptoms: chest pain, dyspnea, tachycardia
Pulmonary Embolism (PE)
Days 1–14 (peak: days 5–7)CRITICALKey Findings
- ✦Sudden dyspnea — most common presenting sign
- ✦Pleuritic chest pain (worse with inspiration)
- ✦Tachycardia and tachypnea
- ✦Hypoxia (SpO2 drop)
- ✦Hemoptysis (blood-tinged sputum)
- ✦Massive PE: hemodynamic collapse, cardiac arrest
Risk Factors
- ·Existing DVT
- ·Immobility
- ·Recent major surgery
- ·Malignancy
- ·Hypercoagulable state
- ·Oral contraceptives
Immediate Nursing Actions
- 1.Call provider STAT — PE is a medical emergency
- 2.Sit patient up (if hemodynamically stable) — Semi-Fowler
- 3.High-flow oxygen (10–15 L/min non-rebreather)
- 4.Establish or confirm IV access
- 5.Continuous monitoring: ECG, SpO2, BP, RR
- 6.Prepare for anticoagulation or thrombolytics per order
- 7.Code team on standby for massive PE
Atelectasis
Hours 12–48 (most common cause of fever in first 24–48 hrs)MODERATEKey Findings
- ✦Low-grade fever (most common cause post-op fever in first 24–48 hrs)
- ✦Diminished breath sounds at lung bases
- ✦Tachypnea
- ✦Decreased SpO2
- ✦Dull percussion at bases
Risk Factors
- ·Upper abdominal or thoracic surgery
- ·Prolonged supine positioning
- ·Pain limiting deep breathing
- ·Obesity
- ·Smoking history
- ·Pre-existing COPD
Immediate Nursing Actions
- 1.Incentive spirometer — 10 breaths/hour while awake
- 2.Encourage deep breathing and controlled coughing
- 3.Splinting: pillow against incision during coughing
- 4.Ambulate — most effective intervention
- 5.Supplemental O2 as needed
- 6.Notify provider if SpO2 <92% despite interventions
Pneumonia
Days 3–7 (typically after atelectasis progresses or aspiration)MODERATEKey Findings
- ✦High fever (>101.5°F)
- ✦Productive cough with purulent sputum
- ✦Pleuritic chest pain
- ✦Crackles, decreased breath sounds, consolidation on auscultation
- ✦Elevated WBC
- ✦Tachycardia and tachypnea
Risk Factors
- ·Pre-existing respiratory disease
- ·Prolonged intubation
- ·Aspiration risk
- ·Immunocompromised
- ·Untreated atelectasis
- ·Poor oral hygiene
Immediate Nursing Actions
- 1.Notify provider — sputum cultures before starting antibiotics (if possible)
- 2.Antibiotic therapy per culture/order
- 3.Aggressive pulmonary toilet: deep breathing, coughing, incentive spirometer
- 4.Supplemental O2
- 5.HOB elevation 30–45°
- 6.Adequate hydration to thin secretions
Surgical Site Infection (SSI)
Superficial: days 3–7; Deep/organ space: days 5–30+MODERATEKey Findings
- ✦Fever (usually days 3–5)
- ✦Wound erythema, warmth, induration
- ✦Purulent or increased wound drainage
- ✦Wound tenderness beyond expected post-op pain
- ✦Elevated WBC
- ✦Malaise
Risk Factors
- ·Contaminated/dirty wound class
- ·Obesity
- ·Diabetes (hyperglycemia)
- ·Immunosuppression
- ·Prolonged preop hospitalization
- ·Inadequate antibiotic prophylaxis timing
Immediate Nursing Actions
- 1.Notify provider
- 2.Wound culture if purulent drainage (before antibiotics if possible)
- 3.Aseptic wound care — do NOT open wound without order
- 4.Document drainage: amount, color, odor, consistency
- 5.Antibiotic therapy per order/culture
- 6.Blood glucose monitoring and control (hyperglycemia impairs healing)
Wound Dehiscence
Days 5–10 (peak risk period)URGENTKey Findings
- ✦Patient reports feeling wound give way or pop
- ✦Visible wound edge separation or gap
- ✦Sudden increase in serosanguineous drainage
- ✦Wound dressing soaked
Risk Factors
- ·Obesity (increased wound tension)
- ·Malnutrition
- ·Wound infection
- ·Chronic steroid use
- ·Violent coughing/vomiting
- ·Premature suture removal
Immediate Nursing Actions
- 1.Cover wound with sterile saline-soaked gauze
- 2.Notify surgeon immediately
- 3.Keep patient supine with knees slightly flexed (reduces abdominal tension)
- 4.Maintain NPO — may need wound closure procedure
- 5.Do NOT attempt to close or manipulate wound edges
- 6.Document wound status with photograph if facility policy allows
Evisceration
Days 5–10 (same risk window as dehiscence)SURGICAL EMERGENCYKey Findings
- ✦Abdominal organs (bowel, omentum) protruding through wound
- ✦Always accompanies dehiscence
- ✦Sudden patient distress
- ✦Wound completely open
Risk Factors
- ·Same as dehiscence — obesity, malnutrition, infection, steroids
- ·Intra-abdominal pressure (vomiting, ileus)
- ·Any high-tension wound closure
Immediate Nursing Actions
- 1.CALL FOR HELP immediately — surgical emergency
- 2.Cover organs with large sterile saline-soaked dressings — keep moist at all times
- 3.Do NOT push organs back into the abdomen
- 4.Keep patient calm and supine, knees slightly flexed
- 5.NPO immediately
- 6.Notify surgeon STAT for emergency OR
- 7.IV access; monitor for shock (tachycardia, hypotension)
NCLEX Quick Differentiator
Tachycardia first sign after surgery — most important complication to rule out
Hemorrhage — check drain, wound, and BP trend
Fever in first 24–48 hrs post-op — most common cause
Atelectasis — NOT infection (too early)
Unilateral leg pain/warmth/swelling
DVT — bilateral edema = fluid overload, not DVT
Sudden dyspnea + pleuritic chest pain + tachycardia
PE — STAT provider notification, high-flow O2
Patient feels wound give way + soaked dressing with serosanguineous drainage
Wound dehiscence — sterile saline-soaked gauze + notify surgeon
Bowel protruding from abdominal wound
Evisceration — moist sterile gauze, do NOT push back, surgical emergency
Fever on days 3–5, purulent wound drainage
SSI — culture wound, notify provider, antibiotics per order
Fever on days 3–7 with high WBC, productive cough, crackles
Pneumonia — culture sputum, antibiotics, aggressive pulmonary toilet
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026This page is written to align with AORN Perioperative Standards; ASPAN PACU Standards; CDC Surgical Site Infection Prevention Guidelines. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →
