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Apex Nursing

Guide — Musculoskeletal

Amputation Nursing Care

Amputation care is two recoveries at once: a surgical wound that must heal into a functional, prosthesis-ready residual limb, and a person absorbing a permanent change to their body. The nursing decisions made in the first week — positioning, wrapping, pain management — shape both.

8 min read · Musculoskeletal

Educational use only. Positioning protocols, wrapping technique, and phantom-pain medication regimens are provider- and facility-directed; coordinate with the surgical and rehabilitation teams. 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.

Overview

Most amputations in adults are not traumatic — they are the endpoint of peripheral arterial disease and diabetes, which means the typical patient carries the comorbidities that caused the amputation into recovery from it. Traumatic amputations skew younger and bring their own psychological acuity.

Levels are described anatomically — below-knee (BKA) and above-knee (AKA) are the common lower-limb levels. Preserving the knee matters enormously: walking with a BKA prosthesis costs far less energy than with an AKA, so rehabilitation potential differs by level.

Key Concepts

Contractures are the preventable disaster

A hip or knee flexion contracture can permanently disqualify a patient from prosthetic walking. Prevention is positional: avoid prolonged sitting, do not prop the residual limb on pillows long-term after the first 24–48 hours (per protocol), keep the knee extended after BKA, and have AKA patients lie prone several times daily to stretch the hip flexors.

Shaping the residual limb is shaping the future

Compression — figure-eight elastic wrapping or a shrinker sock — molds the limb into the conical shape a prosthetic socket needs and controls edema. Wrap distal-to-proximal with more pressure distally; a circular (tourniquet-style) wrap that is tighter proximally traps edema and is the classic wrong answer.

Phantom limb sensation vs phantom limb pain

Sensation (the limb still “feels present”) is near-universal and usually fades. Phantom pain — burning, cramping, shooting pain in the absent limb — is real neuropathic pain with a physiologic basis, treated with agents like gabapentinoids and amitriptyline, mirror therapy, and TENS. Never tell a patient the pain is imaginary.

Hemorrhage readiness

Early post-op, a vessel can open. Keep a surgical tourniquet visible at the bedside per protocol, and treat significant bright-red bleeding as an emergency: direct pressure, call for help, tourniquet per policy.

Assessment Findings

Assess the residual limb each shift and per protocol: incision approximation, drainage character and amount, edema, skin color and warmth, and signs of infection — these patients are often diabetic with impaired healing. Distinguish and document the three pains separately: incisional pain, phantom sensation, and phantom pain, because they are treated differently.

Watch the psychological assessment as closely as the wound: withdrawal, refusal to look at or touch the limb, hopeless statements, or declining participation in therapy are findings, not personality traits — and they predict functional outcomes.

Nursing Priorities

Position for the prosthesis, not just comfort

Prone lying for AKA patients (15–30 minutes, several times daily as tolerated), knee extension for BKA, limited sitting time, no pillow under the limb after the initial period unless ordered. Comfort positioning today is contracture tomorrow.

Treat all three pains

Scheduled and breakthrough analgesia for surgical pain; neuropathic agents and non-pharm options (mirror therapy, TENS, distraction) for phantom pain — and validate it explicitly.

Protect the other leg

In the vascular/diabetic patient, the remaining foot is at high risk. Daily skin inspection, pressure off-loading, proper footwear, and meticulous glucose management are limb-salvage nursing.

Early mobility with fall vigilance

Patients reach for a leg that is not there, especially at night. Bed alarm per policy, call-light coaching, and transfer training with therapy from day one.

Therapeutic Communication Considerations

Grief after amputation is grief — expect denial, anger, and mourning for the lost limb and the lost identity that came with it. Let the patient set the pace for looking at and touching the residual limb; forcing early confrontation backfires. Name progress concretely when it happens: first transfer, first wrap they did themselves, first therapy session completed.

Involve the family deliberately, and ask about peer support — talking with a rehabilitated amputee often does more for hope than any professional reassurance. For traumatic amputations, screen for acute stress symptoms and refer early.

Patient Education

Teach limb care as a daily routine: inspect with a mirror, wash and dry thoroughly, no lotions or shaving per protocol, wrap or don the shrinker correctly, and report skin breakdown immediately — a wound delays the prosthesis. Explain the prosthetic timeline honestly: fitting waits for the limb to heal and shrink to stable shape, typically weeks to a few months.

Reinforce the positioning rules for home, phantom-pain management options, and — for vascular patients — the protection plan for the remaining limb, because preventing the second amputation is part of this discharge.

NCLEX Pearls

  • AKA patients lie prone several times daily to prevent hip flexion contracture; avoid prolonged sitting and long-term pillow elevation of the limb.
  • Wrap figure-eight, distal to proximal, tightest distally — circular wraps that constrict proximally are the trap answer.
  • Phantom limb pain is real neuropathic pain — validate it and treat it (gabapentinoids, mirror therapy); never dismiss it.
  • Keep a tourniquet at the bedside early post-op per protocol; bright-red bleeding gets direct pressure and an emergency call.
  • Allowing the patient to progress at their own pace with viewing the limb is therapeutic; insisting they “face it” is not.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS) · National Association of Orthopaedic Nurses (NAON). 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 →