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Guide — Perioperative Nursing

Postoperative Nursing Care

The postoperative phase begins when the patient is admitted to the post-anesthesia care unit (PACU) and continues through the recovery period. Nurses must rapidly assess and manage airway, breathing, circulation, pain, and surgical-site integrity while monitoring for life-threatening complications.

12 min read · Perioperative Nursing

Educational use only. This content is intended for nursing students and exam preparation. Postoperative care protocols are individualized and setting-specific. Always follow provider orders and your institution's PACU standards. 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.

PACU — Phase I vs. Phase II Recovery

Phase I PACU — Immediate Recovery

High-acuity monitoring immediately after surgery. Goal: stabilize vital functions, manage airway and emergence from anesthesia, control pain, prevent life-threatening complications.

  • 1:1 or 1:2 nurse-to-patient ratio
  • Continuous monitoring: ECG, SpO2, BP, RR, temperature
  • Oxygen administration
  • Airway maintenance (positioning, airway adjuncts, suction)
  • Manage emergence: agitation, delirium, shivering
  • Discharge when Aldrete score ≥9

Phase II PACU — Step-Down Recovery

Intermediate monitoring as anesthesia fully resolves. Goal: prepare for discharge home (outpatient) or transfer to inpatient unit.

  • Less intensive monitoring (intermittent vs. continuous)
  • Patient begins tolerating PO liquids
  • Sitting up, ambulating with assistance
  • Discharge teaching initiated or reinforced
  • Pain managed with oral agents
  • Family/support person at bedside

Immediate Postoperative Priorities — ABC Order

A — Airway

Maintain a patent airway — the highest priority after any general anesthesia. Residual neuromuscular blockade, secretions, and tongue falling back are common causes of airway obstruction. Position patient on their side (lateral) if not contraindicated — reduces aspiration risk. Keep suction at bedside. Assess for stridor, decreased SpO2, snoring, or retractions.

  • Lateral positioning until fully awake
  • Jaw thrust or chin lift if obstructed
  • Oral/nasopharyngeal airway if needed
  • Suction secretions as needed
  • Maintain supplemental oxygen per order
B — Breathing

Assess respiratory rate, depth, pattern, and oxygen saturation. Respiratory depression is a major concern with opioid analgesia and residual anesthetic agents. Incentive spirometer use and deep breathing exercises begin as soon as patient is alert.

  • SpO2 monitoring — target ≥95% per provider
  • Supplemental O2 (nasal cannula to non-rebreather as needed)
  • Encourage deep breathing every hour while awake
  • Incentive spirometer 10 breaths per hour
  • Assess for equal bilateral breath sounds
C — Circulation

Monitor vital signs per protocol (typically q15min × 4, then q30min × 2, then q1h). Assess skin color, warmth, capillary refill. Monitor urine output (goal ≥0.5 mL/kg/hr). Watch for hemorrhage — increased HR, decreased BP, pallor, restlessness.

  • VS per PACU protocol
  • IV access confirmed and infusing
  • Monitor for hemorrhage: VS trends, incision bleeding, drain output
  • Assess urine output (Foley if present)
  • 12-lead ECG if cardiac concerns arise
D — Disability (Neurological)

Assess level of consciousness, orientation, ability to follow commands, and motor function. Emergence agitation, delayed emergence, and emergence delirium are common. Reorient patient frequently — hearing returns before full awareness, so speaking calmly is important throughout emergence.

  • GCS or orientation assessment
  • Reorient repeatedly: name, location, 'surgery is over'
  • Side rails up — fall risk is highest during emergence
  • Assess for post-anesthesia shivering (warming blankets)
  • Check motor strength in extremities after regional anesthesia

Pain Management

ModalityDescriptionNursing Points
IV opioids (morphine, hydromorphone, fentanyl)First-line IV analgesia in PACU for moderate-to-severe painMonitor respiratory rate and sedation level with each dose; have naloxone available
PCA (patient-controlled analgesia)Patient self-administers preset IV opioid dose with lockout intervalEducate patient to press before pain is severe; ONLY patient presses button — not family
IV acetaminophen (Ofirmev)Non-opioid IV analgesic — used as part of multimodal analgesiaDoes not cause respiratory depression; effective opioid-sparing adjunct
Ketorolac (Toradol)NSAID — IV/IM for acute postoperative pain; max 5 daysHold if renal impairment, active GI bleeding, or elevated bleeding risk; effective anti-inflammatory
Regional analgesia (nerve blocks, epidural)Catheter or single-shot block provides prolonged site-specific analgesiaAssess dermatomal level for spinal/epidural; assess motor function; monitor for urinary retention
Non-pharmacologicalIce packs, positioning, splinting, relaxation, distractionComplement pharmacological management; especially effective for superficial/incisional pain

Early Ambulation

Early ambulation is one of the most effective interventions to prevent postoperative complications. Most patients are encouraged to sit up on the evening of surgery and ambulate by the first postoperative morning.

DVT/PE

Activates calf muscle pump → promotes venous return

Atelectasis/Pneumonia

Expands lung bases; mobilizes secretions

Postoperative ileus

Stimulates GI motility

Pressure injuries

Reduces prolonged skin compression

Muscle deconditioning

Maintains strength and independence

Urinary retention

Normalizes bladder function; reduces Foley need

Ambulation safety: Dangle at bedside first (assess for orthostatic hypotension). Have patient stand with support. Short distance with assistance first. Document tolerance and distance ambulated.

Aldrete Score — PACU Discharge Criteria

Category210
ActivityMoves all 4 extremities on commandMoves 2 extremitiesUnable to move extremities
RespirationBreathes deeply; coughs freelyDyspnea or limited breathingApneic; requires ventilatory support
CirculationBP ±20% of pre-anesthesia levelBP ±20–49%BP ±50% or more from baseline
ConsciousnessFully awake and alertArousable on callingNot responding
Oxygen saturationSpO2 >92% on room airRequires supplemental O2 to maintain >90%SpO2 <90% even with O2

Score of 9–10 required for PACU Phase I discharge. Maximum score = 10.

Fluid Balance and Output Monitoring

IV fluid administration

Continue ordered IV fluids; transition to PO as tolerated. Assess for signs of fluid overload (crackles, edema) and dehydration (dry mucous membranes, decreased urine output, tachycardia).

Urine output

Goal: ≥0.5 mL/kg/hr. Less than 30 mL/hr for 2 consecutive hours is concerning — assess IV fluid status, bladder scan if Foley not present, and notify provider if no improvement.

Drain output

Record drain output every shift or per protocol. Note amount, color, and character. Excessive bleeding from surgical drain may indicate hemorrhage — notify provider for sudden increase in bright red drainage.

Nasogastric tube (if present)

Keep tube patent and in correct position. Record amount and character of drainage. NG tubes are not routinely clamped without an order.

NCLEX Pearls — Postoperative Nursing

Airway is ALWAYS the first priority in postoperative assessment — before pain, before drain, before anything else
Lateral positioning reduces aspiration risk in the immediate postoperative period before full airway reflexes return
PCA pump: only the PATIENT should press the button — family pressing it bypasses the pain-sedation safety mechanism
Ketorolac (Toradol): max 5-day use, contraindicated in renal impairment and active bleeding risk
Aldrete score ≥9 = safe for PACU discharge; assess all 5 categories
Urine output <30 mL/hr × 2 hours postoperatively = notify provider
Early ambulation prevents: DVT, pneumonia, ileus, pressure injury, deconditioning
Respiratory depression: most dangerous opioid complication — monitor RR and sedation score with each dose
Post-anesthesia shivering: vasoconstruction → hypoxia → increased oxygen demand; warm blankets first-line treatment
Wound complications: dehiscence (wound opens) vs. evisceration (organs protrude) — evisceration is an emergency

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with AORN Guidelines for Perioperative Practice · American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA). 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 →