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Apex Nursing

Chart — Perioperative Nursing

Surgical Drain Comparison

Side-by-side comparison of the major surgical drain types — chest tube, Jackson-Pratt, Hemovac, Penrose, and Blake drain: mechanism, suction type, common uses, nursing management, output monitoring, and key complications.

Educational use only. Drain management protocols are individualized and facility-specific. Follow provider orders for all drain care, stripping, milking, and removal. Sudden increases in bright red output from any drain require immediate provider notification. 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.

Chest Tube (Thoracostomy)

Water-seal passive drainage OR regulated suction

Mechanism

Three-chamber water-seal drainage system. Chamber 1 collects drainage. Chamber 2 prevents air backflow (water seal). Chamber 3 controls suction level.

Typical Uses

  • Pneumothorax
  • Hemothorax
  • Pleural effusion
  • Empyema
  • Post-thoracic/cardiac surgery

Output Monitoring

Record drainage per shift. Mark drainage level on collection chamber. Assess tidaling (water rising/falling with respiration = patent tube). Assess for air leak in water-seal chamber.

Management

Keep system below chest level at all times. Do not clamp without order. Prevent dependent loops. Tape all connections.

Complications

  • ·Air leak (continuous bubbling in water-seal chamber)
  • ·Tube dislodgement or disconnection
  • ·Obstruction (no tidaling, no drainage)
  • ·Subcutaneous emphysema

Disconnection: submerge end in sterile water. Dislodgement: seal with petroleum gauze (3 sides open).

Jackson-Pratt (JP) Drain

Active — closed negative pressure

Mechanism

Flat, bulb-shaped reservoir connected to a perforated silicone drain at the surgical site. Negative pressure (suction) is created by compressing and capping the bulb.

Typical Uses

  • Mastectomy
  • Pelvic/abdominal surgery
  • Lymph node dissection
  • Major orthopedic procedures

Output Monitoring

Empty when half full or per protocol. Record volume and character. Expected: bright red → serosanguineous → serous over days.

Management

Compress bulb FULLY before capping to re-establish suction. Secure tubing to prevent traction. Mark skin at exit site for migration monitoring.

Complications

  • ·Loss of suction (bulb not properly compressed)
  • ·Tube obstruction
  • ·Infection at exit site
  • ·Inadvertent removal

Sudden increase in bright red output: assess for hemorrhage — notify provider STAT.

Hemovac Drain

Active — closed spring-loaded negative pressure

Mechanism

Flat, accordion-style (spring-loaded) reservoir. Suction is created when compressed flat and capped — spring tension causes reservoir to expand, drawing drainage in.

Typical Uses

  • Total joint replacement (hip, knee)
  • Large abdominal or orthopedic surgeries
  • Higher-volume drainage expected

Output Monitoring

Empty when half full or per protocol. Record output each emptying. Assess that suction is maintained (reservoir remains compressed between empties).

Management

Compress FLAT (squeeze out all air) before capping. Secure and position below surgical site. Higher volume capacity than JP drain.

Complications

  • ·Loss of suction (reservoir not fully compressed)
  • ·Tube kinking or obstruction
  • ·Site infection

Sudden bright red output increase or hemodynamic instability: notify provider immediately.

Penrose Drain

Passive — open drainage (gravity and capillary)

Mechanism

Soft, flat rubber tube with no reservoir. Drainage occurs by gravity and capillary action — passive, open drainage. Fluid wicks through the tube and absorbs into surrounding dressings.

Typical Uses

  • Abscess drainage
  • Superficial wound drainage
  • Bile leak after cholecystectomy
  • Situations where active suction is NOT desired

Output Monitoring

Drainage absorbs into dressings. Assess dressing saturation. Weigh dressings or estimate saturation to quantify. Assess drainage color and odor.

Management

Frequent dressing changes required (absorptive dressings). Protect periwound skin from maceration. Safety pin or suture secures drain from complete withdrawal. Provider gradually shortens drain as wound heals.

Complications

  • ·Skin maceration from continuous drainage
  • ·Premature drain withdrawal
  • ·Periwound skin breakdown
  • ·Foul odor indicating infection

Foul-smelling or purulent drainage: assess for infection — notify provider.

Blake Drain

Active — closed negative pressure (via connected reservoir)

Mechanism

Silicone drain with longitudinal fluted channels along the exterior surface. Drainage occurs via capillary action along the flutes and negative pressure from connected reservoir. Less tissue trauma than older designs.

Typical Uses

  • Abdominal surgery
  • Thoracic surgery
  • Hepatobiliary surgery
  • Increasingly replacing round drain designs

Output Monitoring

Similar to JP drain. Record output volume and character per shift. Assess reservoir suction. Decreasing output over days is expected.

Management

Connected to closed-suction reservoir (similar to JP). Minimal manipulation — secure and protect from traction. Monitor exit site for infection or tube migration.

Complications

  • ·Obstruction (fluted channels can occlude)
  • ·Loss of suction (same as JP)
  • ·Site infection
  • ·Inadvertent removal

Sudden cessation of drainage with persistent symptoms: possible obstruction — notify provider.

DrainSuctionHow to Empty/ResetKey NCLEX Point
Chest TubeWater-seal or regulated suctionNever clamp without order; keep below chest level; mark and document drainage q shiftTidaling (water rises/falls with breathing) = tube patent; constant bubbling = air leak
Jackson-PrattActive (bulb suction)Empty when half full; compress bulb FULLY before cappingSuction is only active when bulb is fully compressed before capping
HemovacActive (spring-loaded)Empty when half full; compress FLAT before cappingSqueeze ALL air out before capping — spring creates suction as it expands
PenrosePassive (gravity)No reservoir to empty; change absorptive dressings frequentlyOnly passive drain — no active suction; protect periwound skin from maceration
BlakeActive (via reservoir)Same as JP — compress reservoir before cappingFluted design reduces tissue trauma compared to round drains

NCLEX Quick Reference — Surgical Drains

Drain with bulb you compress before capping to create suction

Jackson-Pratt (JP) drain — compress bulb fully before capping

Drain with accordion-style flat reservoir — squeeze out all air

Hemovac drain — spring tension creates suction as it expands

Passive drain — gravity only, no reservoir, frequent dressing changes needed

Penrose drain — protect periwound skin from maceration

Chest tube: water rising and falling with patient breathing

Tidaling — normal, indicates tube patency

Chest tube: constant bubbling in water-seal chamber

Air leak — trace from patient to system to find source

Chest tube accidentally disconnected from drainage system

Submerge tube end in sterile water to restore water seal — STAT notify provider

Chest tube accidentally pulled out of patient

Cover insertion site with petroleum gauze (3 sides sealed) — surgical emergency

Sudden bright red drain output increase from any drain

Suspect hemorrhage — apply pressure, notify provider STAT, continuous monitoring

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with AORN Perioperative Nursing Standards; ASPAN Post-Anesthesia Care Standards; Wound Ostomy Continence Nurses Society (WOCNS) 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 →