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Apex Nursing

Guide — Perioperative Nursing

Preoperative Nursing Care

The preoperative phase begins when the decision is made to perform surgery and ends when the patient is transferred to the operating room. Thorough preoperative nursing assessment, patient education, and safety verification are essential to preventing surgical complications and ensuring informed, safe care.

11 min read · Perioperative Nursing

Educational use only. This content is intended for nursing students and exam preparation. Perioperative protocols vary by institution and surgical setting. Always follow your facility's preoperative policies and provider orders. 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.

Preoperative Assessment

A comprehensive preoperative assessment identifies surgical risk factors, establishes a baseline, and guides perioperative planning. The nurse collects and communicates findings that may alter anesthetic management, surgical technique, or the timing of the procedure.

Assessment AreaKey Data to CollectSignificance
Health historyChronic conditions (cardiac, pulmonary, renal, hepatic, diabetes, coagulopathy), prior surgeries, anesthesia complications, functional statusIdentifies increased risk for complications; guides anesthetic choice
AllergiesDrug, latex, food, environmental — specific reaction type (rash vs. anaphylaxis)Latex allergy triggers OR preparation for latex-free environment; drug allergy avoids anaphylaxis
Current medicationsPrescription, OTC, herbal supplements — especially anticoagulants, antiplatelets, antihypertensives, insulin, corticosteroids, SSRIsMany drugs require holding or dose adjustment perioperatively
Vital signsBaseline BP, HR, RR, SpO2, temperature, height, weight (for weight-based dosing)Abnormal values may delay surgery; baseline needed for postoperative comparison
Cardiac/pulmonary statusExercise tolerance, dyspnea, angina, palpitations, active respiratory infection, smoking historyPoor cardiopulmonary reserve = higher anesthesia risk; smoking cessation reduces complications
Laboratory and diagnosticsCBC (anemia, thrombocytopenia), BMP (renal function, glucose, electrolytes), coagulation (PT/INR/aPTT), type & screen, ECG (cardiac patients), CXR (pulmonary disease)Abnormal labs may require correction before surgery
PsychosocialUnderstanding of procedure, anxiety level, support system, cultural or religious considerations, advance directives/healthcare proxyUnmanaged anxiety impairs recovery; advance directives must be honored

NPO (Nothing by Mouth) Guidelines

Purpose: NPO status minimizes the risk of pulmonary aspiration of gastric contents during anesthesia induction — a potentially fatal complication. ASA (American Society of Anesthesiologists) guidelines provide standardized fasting intervals.

Intake TypeFasting IntervalExamples
Clear liquids2 hoursWater, clear juice without pulp, carbonated beverages, clear tea or black coffee
Breast milk4 hoursInfants only
Non-human milk / infant formula6 hoursFormula, cow's milk
Light meal6 hoursToast, crackers — minimal fat/protein content
Regular or heavy meal8 hours or moreFried foods, high-fat/protein meals — delays gastric emptying
MedicationsVariesAntihypertensives, beta-blockers, anti-seizure drugs typically taken with small sip of water; hold others per anesthesia order

NCLEX alert: If a patient ate or drank within the NPO window — notify the surgeon and anesthesia provider immediately. Surgery is typically postponed to reduce aspiration risk.

Medication Review — Perioperative Holding

Drug ClassTypical ManagementRationale
Anticoagulants (warfarin, heparin)Hold per provider order — timing depends on procedure and drug; bridge therapy may be neededBleeding risk during surgery; INR must reach safe threshold
Antiplatelets (aspirin, clopidogrel)Often held 5–7 days before surgeryPlatelet aggregation inhibition increases surgical bleeding
NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen)Often held 3–5 days before surgeryImpair platelet function and renal prostaglandins
Antihypertensives (ACE-I, ARBs)Often held morning of surgery — beta-blockers typically continuedACE-I/ARBs associated with refractory hypotension under anesthesia; abrupt beta-blocker discontinuation may cause rebound hypertension/tachycardia
InsulinDose adjustment required — typically 50% of long-acting dose; hold short-acting if NPONPO status reduces insulin requirement; hypoglycemia under anesthesia is dangerous
Oral hypoglycemics (metformin)Often held on day of surgery and 24–48 hrs after if contrast usedMetformin + contrast + renal stress = lactic acidosis risk
Corticosteroids (chronic use)Continue — may require stress-dose steroids perioperativelyAdrenal insufficiency risk (HPA axis suppression) under surgical stress
Herbal supplements (ginseng, garlic, ginkgo, St. John's Wort)Hold 1–2 weeks before surgeryAntiplatelet effects, drug interactions, hepatic enzyme induction
Anti-seizure medicationsContinue — take with sip of water morning of surgerySeizure threshold reduction if abruptly stopped

Consent Verification

Nurse's role in consent

The surgeon or provider is responsible for obtaining informed consent — not the nurse. The nurse's role is to: (1) verify the consent form is signed, dated, and complete; (2) confirm the patient understands what they signed; (3) notify the provider if the patient has questions, changed their mind, or appears not to understand.

Witnessing vs. obtaining consent

When a nurse witnesses a consent signature, they attest that the patient signed voluntarily and appeared competent — NOT that the patient was fully informed (that is the provider's responsibility). Nurses should never pressure a patient to sign and must escalate patient concerns to the provider.

If consent is absent, unclear, or not understood: Do not proceed with surgery preparation. Notify the provider immediately. Surgery should not proceed without valid informed consent except in a true emergency.

WHO Surgical Safety Checklist — Sign-In / Time-Out / Sign-Out

Sign-In

Before induction of anesthesia

  • Patient identity confirmed
  • Surgical site marked and confirmed
  • Anesthesia safety check complete
  • Allergies reviewed
  • Pulse oximeter on and functioning

Time-Out

Before skin incision

  • All team members introduced
  • Patient identity reconfirmed
  • Procedure and site reconfirmed
  • Anticipated critical events reviewed
  • Antibiotic prophylaxis confirmed
  • Imaging displayed

Sign-Out

Before leaving the OR

  • Procedure performed confirmed
  • Instrument, sponge, needle count complete and correct
  • Specimen labeled correctly
  • Equipment problems documented
  • Key recovery concerns identified

Patient Teaching

Deep breathing and coughing exercises

Teach incentive spirometer use, controlled coughing, and splinting technique (pillow against incision site while coughing). Practice before surgery so the skill is established before pain makes it difficult.

What to expect after surgery

Prepare patient for expected postoperative experiences: IV lines, monitoring devices, oxygen, possible nasogastric tube, urinary catheter, surgical drains, and wound dressings. Reduces anxiety when these are encountered in recovery.

Pain management options

Explain pain scale assessment, patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) if applicable, and the importance of reporting pain before it becomes severe. Reassure that postoperative pain will be actively managed.

Early ambulation

Explain that early ambulation (getting out of bed) — often beginning the evening of or morning after surgery — is expected and important for preventing complications including DVT, pneumonia, and ileus.

Activity and restriction education

Procedure-specific restrictions: lifting limits, wound care, driving restrictions, when to return to work, sexual activity restrictions, follow-up appointments.

When to call the provider

Fever >101°F (38.3°C), increased pain or redness at incision, wound opening, foul odor or purulent drainage, difficulty breathing, leg pain or swelling, or any other concerning new symptom.

Preoperative Checklist — Nursing Responsibilities

Documentation & Verification

  • Informed consent: signed, dated, correct procedure and site
  • History and physical completed within 30 days (or 24 hrs pre-op for inpatients)
  • Advance directive / healthcare proxy confirmed and noted
  • Lab and diagnostic results reviewed and communicated to team
  • Allergies documented and bracelet applied (include latex if applicable)
  • Surgical site marking by surgeon confirmed
  • Blood type and screen / crossmatch completed if required

Physical Preparation

  • NPO status confirmed — last intake documented
  • IV access established (appropriate gauge for anticipated needs)
  • Preoperative medications administered per order (anxiolytic, antibiotics)
  • Jewelry, nail polish, and prosthetics removed
  • Hearing aids, glasses, dentures removed per protocol
  • Identification bracelet correct and readable
  • Hospital gown on; patient voided if not catheterized
  • Skin prep as ordered (CHG bath, hair removal as ordered)

NCLEX Pearls — Preoperative Nursing

NPO times: clear liquids = 2 hrs; light meal = 6 hrs; heavy meal = 8 hrs (ASA guidelines)
Nurse witnesses consent — provider OBTAINS it. Never pressure a patient to sign.
If patient ate within NPO window: notify surgeon and anesthesia provider — surgery typically postponed
Warfarin is held before surgery; INR must reach safe threshold; bridge heparin may be ordered
Metformin held before surgery with contrast dye — risk of lactic acidosis
Beta-blockers are typically CONTINUED perioperatively — abrupt discontinuation = rebound hypertension
Corticosteroids (chronic use): stress-dose perioperative steroids may be needed — HPA suppression risk
Time-out occurs BEFORE skin incision — confirms patient identity, procedure, and site
Herbal supplements should be held 1–2 weeks before surgery (antiplatelet and drug interaction effects)
Advance directive must be honored — do not assume surgical setting overrides the patient's expressed wishes

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 →