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Apex Nursing

Reference — Perioperative Nursing

Postoperative Assessment

A systematic postoperative assessment begins immediately upon patient arrival in the PACU and continues throughout the recovery period. The assessment follows a priority-based approach — airway and breathing first, then circulation, neurological status, pain, surgical site, and drains. Trending changes over time is as important as individual findings.

Educational use only. Assessment frequency and parameters are set by provider orders and institutional protocol. PACU assessments are typically q15min initially, then q30min as the patient stabilizes. 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 Handoff — What to Receive from the OR Team

Upon patient arrival in PACU, receive a structured handoff from the anesthesia provider. Do not begin independent care until handoff is complete and monitoring is connected.

Procedure Information

  • Procedure performed and duration
  • Estimated blood loss (EBL)
  • Fluid administered intraoperatively
  • Urine output during procedure
  • Any intraoperative complications or concerns

Anesthesia Information

  • Type of anesthesia used
  • Reversal agents administered (neostigmine, sugammadex)
  • Opioids given — type, dose, time of last dose
  • Intraoperative hemodynamic events
  • Anticipated emergence issues

Patient Status

  • Baseline vital signs and comorbidities
  • Allergies (confirm wristband matches)
  • Current medications relevant to recovery
  • IV access locations and fluids infusing
  • Drains placed — type, location, starting output

Provider Orders

  • Pain management orders (PCA vs. nurse-administered)
  • IV fluid orders
  • Activity restrictions
  • Drain management orders
  • When to contact surgeon or anesthesia

Systematic Assessment — Priority Order

1

Airway

AssessmentNormal FindingAbnormal / ConcernNursing Action
PatencyNo snoring, stridor, or labored breathingSnoring, stridor, gurgling, accessory muscle use → airway obstructionReposition (jaw thrust, chin lift), suction, lateral positioning, oral/nasopharyngeal airway
ET tube (if applicable)Secured at midline, bilateral breath sounds equalUnilateral breath sounds, absent sounds, cuff leakNotify anesthesia; confirm position by auscultation; prepare for chest X-ray
LMA or airway adjunctPatient tolerates without gagging; SpO2 stableLaryngospasm (high-pitched wheeze or complete silence with respiratory effort)Jaw thrust, positive-pressure ventilation, succinylcholine if needed — call anesthesia STAT
2

Breathing & Respiratory

AssessmentNormal FindingAbnormal / ConcernNursing Action
Respiratory rate12–20 breaths/min; regular, unlabored<8 = respiratory depression (opioid effect); >24 = pain, anxiety, respiratory distressRR <8: stimulate patient, withhold further opioids, consider naloxone per order, notify provider
SpO2≥95% on supplemental O2 per order<92% despite supplemental O2; trending downwardIncrease O2, reposition, encourage deep breathing, suction if secretions; notify provider if persistent
Breath soundsClear, equal bilaterally; air entry to basesDiminished at bases (atelectasis), crackles (secretions/fluid), absent (obstruction, pneumothorax)Deep breathing/incentive spirometer for atelectasis; report asymmetric breath sounds — may indicate pneumothorax
Respirations qualityChest rises symmetricallyAsymmetric chest rise, paradoxical movement, abdominal breathing onlyNotify provider; assess for pneumothorax (absent breath sounds + tracheal deviation = emergency)
3

Circulation & Cardiovascular

AssessmentNormal FindingAbnormal / ConcernNursing Action
Heart rate60–100 bpm; regularTachycardia: pain, fever, hemorrhage, hypovolemia, anxiety. Bradycardia: spinal level too high, vagal response, medication effectIdentify and treat underlying cause; tachycardia after surgery = hemorrhage until proven otherwise
Blood pressureWithin 20% of patient baselineHypotension: hemorrhage, sympathetic block (spinal/epidural), vasodilation from anesthetics. Hypertension: pain, anxiety, bladder distension, uncontrolled hypertensionHypotension: IV fluid bolus, vasopressors per order, check for bleeding. Hypertension: pain management, antihypertensives per order
Peripheral perfusionWarm, pink extremities; capillary refill <2 secondsCool, pale, mottled skin; delayed capillary refillWarming measures; assess for hemorrhage or cardiac output compromise
Urine output (if Foley present)≥0.5 mL/kg/hr (typically ≥30 mL/hr)<30 mL/hr × 2 consecutive hoursAssess fluid status; IV fluid challenge per order; bladder scan if catheter concerns; notify provider
4

Neurological & Level of Consciousness

AssessmentNormal FindingAbnormal / ConcernNursing Action
Level of consciousnessProgressively awakening; responds to verbal stimulationUnresponsive to verbal stimulation; delayed awakening beyond expected emergence timeReversal agents (naloxone, flumazenil) per order; rule out opioid excess, hypoglycemia, hypoxia; notify anesthesia
OrientationOriented to person, then place, then time as emergence progressesAgitation, combativeness, confusion, disorientation not improvingReorient calmly; address pain; assess for emergence delirium, hypoxia, bladder distension, uncontrolled pain
Motor functionAbility to move all extremities (or expected block with regional anesthesia)Unexpected weakness or asymmetric movement NOT explained by regional anesthesiaDistinguish regional anesthesia block from new neurological deficit; notify surgeon if unexpected motor deficit
Regional anesthesia blockDermatomal sensory and motor block at expected levelBlock level higher than expected; unexpected bilateral dense motor blockEpidural: check for high block, notify anesthesia; assess hemodynamic stability
5

Pain

AssessmentNormal FindingAbnormal / ConcernNursing Action
Pain intensityManageable (≤4/10 on 0–10 scale, or patient-defined tolerable)Uncontrolled pain (>7/10 despite analgesic administration)Reassess dose/timing; titrate analgesia per order; reassess 20–30 minutes after intervention
Pain character and locationLocalized to surgical site; consistent with procedureChest pain (MI, PE), new severe abdominal pain (hemorrhage, bowel injury), leg pain (DVT)Differentiate expected surgical pain from new or unexpected pain — new unexpected severe pain = notify provider
Analgesic response and side effectsPain decreasing within 20–30 minutes of interventionNo response to analgesic; excessive sedation with analgesicSedation score ≥3 (barely rousable) with analgesic: withhold next dose, stimulate, notify provider; consider naloxone if RR <8
6

Surgical Site

AssessmentNormal FindingAbnormal / ConcernNursing Action
Wound/dressingDressing intact; small amount of sanguineous or serosanguineous drainageBright red saturating dressing, expanding hematoma, wound not closedDo NOT remove or loosen surgical dressing without order; reinforce if needed; mark drainage area and time; notify surgeon for rapid expansion
Wound edges (if visible)Approximated; staples or sutures intactWound edges separating (dehiscence); tissue protrusion (evisceration)Dehiscence: sterile saline-soaked gauze + notify surgeon. Evisceration: EMERGENCY — cover with moist sterile gauze, do not push back, call surgeon STAT
Signs of infectionMinimal erythema expected around edges (early), no purulent drainageExcessive erythema, warmth, purulent drainage, feverCulture wound if purulent drainage present per order; notify provider; early SSI assessment begins postoperatively
7

Drains & Tubes

AssessmentNormal FindingAbnormal / ConcernNursing Action
Drain output volume and characterDecreasing volume over time; blood → serosanguineous → serous progressionSudden increase in bright red drainage; cessation with expected drainage (obstruction)Bright red increase: assess for hemorrhage, notify provider STAT. No drainage: assess tube for kinking; notify provider
Drain patency and suctionActive drains (JP, Hemovac) maintaining suction; collection chamber below insertion siteDrain not collecting (suction lost); collection chamber above patient levelRe-establish suction per drain type; keep collection below insertion site at all times
Nasogastric tube (if present)Correct position; patent; correct drainage amount per procedureTube not draining; patient vomiting with NG in place; tube dislodgedAssess tube position; notify provider if dislodged; do NOT reinsert without order (risk of injury at surgical site)

NCLEX Pearls — Postoperative Assessment

Assessment priority order: Airway → Breathing → Circulation → Neuro → Pain → Surgical site → Drains
First assessment after any anesthesia: AIRWAY — maintain lateral positioning until protective reflexes confirmed
Tachycardia after surgery: hemorrhage until proven otherwise — assess for hypotension, pallor, increased drain output
Aldrete score ≥9 = PACU Phase I discharge ready (activity, respiration, circulation, consciousness, SpO2)
Urine output <30 mL/hr × 2 hours = notify provider
Unexpected new severe pain NOT at surgical site: rule out MI (chest), PE (pleuritic chest), DVT (leg), bowel injury
Evisceration (bowel protruding from wound): cover moist sterile gauze, do NOT push back — surgical emergency
Regional anesthesia block: motor weakness is expected during block — distinguish from new neurological deficit
High spinal block: ascending sensory level, hypotension, respiratory compromise — notify anesthesia STAT
Drain output: sudden increase in bright red = hemorrhage; cessation = obstruction; both require provider notification

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 →