Ch12 Vital Signs: Temperature, Pulse, Respiration & Blood Pressure
Learning Objectives
Comprehensive mastery goals derived from lecture slides/pages:
Describe the four vital signs assessed in dentistry: temperature, pulse, respirations, blood pressure.
Explain WHY recording vitals is integral to dental/ dental-hygiene care (screening for systemic disease, determining treatment modifications, preventing emergencies).
Identify temperature ranges that define:
Hyperthermic >104^\circ\text{F}
Pyrexic (fever) >99.5^\circ\text{F}
Hypothermic <96^\circ\text{F}
Normal 97–99^\circ\text{F}
Demonstrate and accurately document temperature, pulse, respiration (RR), blood-pressure (BP) readings.
Discuss “rate” for both pulse (beats · min^{-1}) & respirations (breaths · min^{-1}).
Know adult ranges for normal, tachy-, and brady- forms of pulse/respiration.
List & describe three interpretation characteristics for both pulse (rate, rhythm, force) and respirations (depth, rhythm, quality/sound).
Define systolic vs. diastolic BP; define normal pulse pressure, hypertension, postural (orthostatic) hypotension.
Execute full BP procedure, recognize readings warranting faculty/dentist consultation or patient dismissal.
Overview of Vital Signs
Vital signs act as baseline physiologic indicators; deviations flag physiologic stress, systemic disease, drug reactions.
Four measures: Temperature → Pulse → Respirations → Blood Pressure (TPR-BP), always obtained with patient seated upright after explanation & consent.
If ANY reading is outside normal limits, advise medical follow-up & document.
Patient Preparation & Communication
Position: Upright, arm supported at heart level, legs uncrossed.
Explain: “Your vital signs help us plan safe dental care and screen for hidden problems.”
Obtain informed consent; reassure that procedure is non-invasive.
If abnormal: Document conversation in SOAP format (e.g., “Informed pt of elevated BP and associated risks; advised MD follow-up.”)
Body Temperature
Normal Ranges by Age
Adults: Average 98.6^\circ\text{F} (range 97–99^\circ\text{F}).
Older adults (>70 y): Slightly lower average 96.8^\circ\text{F} (36^\circ\text{C}).
Children (selected milestones):
1 y: 99.1^\circ\text{F}\,(37.3^\circ\text{C})
4 y: 99.4^\circ\text{F}\,(37.5^\circ\text{C})
5 y: 98.6^\circ\text{F}\,(37^\circ\text{C})
12 y: 98^\circ\text{F}\,(36.7^\circ\text{C})
Factors Affecting Temperature
Time of day: Lowest early AM/ sleep; highest late afternoon/evening.
Temporary ↑: Exercise, hot drinks, smoking, external heat.
Pathologic ↑: Infection, dehydration, hyperthyroidism, MI, trauma.
Decrease: Starvation, hemorrhage, shock.
Temperature Variations & Clinical Actions
Pyrexia (Fever): >99.5^\circ\text{F} → evaluate; may postpone elective care.
Hyperthermia: >104^\circ\text{F} → medical emergency; consider hospital referral.
Hypothermia: <96^\circ\text{F} → monitor; warm patient; potential medical consult.
Clinic dismissal threshold (per slide): 100.4^\circ\text{F}.
Thermometer Types
Digital, tympanic, temporal artery scanners, glass/mercury (obsolete). Choose appropriate, follow manufacturer infection-control.
Review Prompt
“Pt temp 100.5^\circ\text{F} = Fever; 104^\circ\text{F} = Hyperthermia → stop dental care, arrange medical eval; >104^\circ\text{F} counts as emergency.”
Pulse (Heart Rate)
Physiology & Definition
Pulse = intermittent arterial expansion with each left-ventricular contraction.
Common site: Radial artery (thumb-side wrist).
Normal Adult Pulse
Broad normal 60–100\,\text{bpm} (slightly ↑ in women).
Children: Rate declines with age (e.g., infant 80–160\,\text{bpm}; school-age 75–110\,\text{bpm}).
Abnormal Adult Pulse
Tachycardia: >100\,\text{bpm}.
Bradycardia: <50\,\text{bpm}.
Assessment Procedure
Explain measurement; ensure arm supported, legs uncrossed.
Locate radial pulse with index + middle finger (never thumb).
Once pulse felt, count for 1 full minute while watching a clock.
Observe & record:
Rate (\text{bpm})
Rhythm: Regular vs. irregular
Strength/Volume: Strong, weak, bounding, thready
Chart example: "Pulse: 75\,\text{bpm}, regular, strong."
Mnemonic Example
Meme slide “Ahem, pulse check” emphasizes clinician mindfulness.
Review Prompt
Typical adult range? Answer: 60–100\,\text{bpm}.
Respirations (RR)
Function & Definition
Respiration exchanges O2 for CO2; one inspiration + one expiration = 1 breath.
Influenced by age, stress, medical status.
Normal Ranges
Adults: 12–20\,\text{rpm} (slightly ↑ in women).
Older adults: RR >20 may predict serious events; monitor closely.
Children: Gradual decline with age; infants 30–60\,\text{rpm}; school-age 18–30\,\text{rpm}.
Abnormal Rates (Adults)
Bradypnea: <12\,\text{rpm}.
Tachypnea: >28\,\text{rpm}; >60\,\text{rpm} = dangerous.
Measurement Technique
Immediately after pulse, keep fingers on radial artery so pt remains unaware.
Count chest rises for 60 s.
Maintain patient’s normal posture; avoid verbal cues.
Interpretation Parameters
Depth: Shallow / Normal / Deep.
Rhythm: Regular vs. irregular.
Quality / Sounds: Easy, labored, wheezing, gurgling.
Document any cyanosis, positional intolerance, or dyspnea.
Review Prompt
Normal adult RR? 12–20\,\text{rpm}.
Blood Pressure (BP)
Physiology Refresher
BP = force of circulating blood on arterial walls.
Generated by left-ventricular systole; propagates through aorta → arteries → arterioles → capillaries.
Components & Normal Values
Systolic (SBP): Peak during ventricular contraction; target <120\,\text{mmHg}.
Diastolic (DBP): Trough during relaxation; target <80\,\text{mmHg}.
Pulse Pressure: \text{SBP} - \text{DBP}; normal \approx 30–40\,\text{mmHg}.
Hypertension (HTN)
Affects 1⁄3 U.S. population; leading mortality contributor.
Classification (ACC/AHA guidelines mirrored in slide):
Normal: SBP <120 AND DBP <80
Elevated: SBP 120–129 AND DBP <80
Stage 1 HTN: SBP 130–139 OR DBP 80–89
Stage 2 HTN: SBP \ge 140 OR DBP \ge 90
Hypertensive Crisis: \ge180/\ge120\,\text{mmHg} → seek emergency care.
Dental-Clinic Protocol (Stage 2 ≥160/95)
Take initial BP; record.
Wait 5 min → manual retake left arm; record.
If still ≥160/95, wait 5 min → third reading; record.
Present to faculty & dentist → dismiss patient & refer (treatment postponed; no written medical clearance required).
Hypertensive Crisis Management
Reading \ge180/120 → stop treatment, inform dentist, consider 911 or hospital referral.
Factors Influencing BP
↑: Exercise, meals, stimulants, emotional stress, oral contraceptives.
↓: Fasting, rest, depressants, shock, acute blood loss.
Underlying determinants: Cardiac output (force), peripheral resistance (arterial condition), blood volume.
Equipment
Sphygmomanometer (cuff + manometer): Mercury (gold standard), aneroid (requires calibration), electronic.
Stethoscope: Clean earpieces before/after use; earpieces angled forward in ears.
Cuff Selection & Placement
Width ≈ 1/3$–$1/2 arm circumference; bladder length \ge80\% of arm circumference.
Position: Lower edge 1\," above antecubital fossa; center over brachial artery (medial to biceps tendon).
Measurement Steps (Manual)
Palpate brachial artery; apply cuff snugly.
Palpate radial pulse; inflate cuff until pulse disappears → note reading = Estimated SBP.
Inflate 30 mmHg beyond estimated SBP → Maximum Inflation Level (MIL) ensuring artery occlusion without excessive discomfort.
Place stethoscope over brachial artery; release valve 2–3 mmHg · s^{-1}.
Korotkoff sounds:
Phase I (first clear “tap”) → SBP.
Phase V (last distinct sound) → DBP.
Deflate cuff fully; record reading with units (e.g., 118/76\,\text{mmHg}, left arm, seated).
Documentation & Patient Education
Chart vitals; if elevated, verbally inform patient:
Example script: “Your BP is a little high today (e.g., 142/88\,\text{mmHg}). High BP increases risk of emergencies like heart attacks and strokes. We’ll re-check each visit, but please follow up with your physician.”
SOAP entry: “Informed pt of elevated BP & risks; advised MD f/u.”
Follow-Up & Ethical Obligations
Record vitals on ALL new patients; re-check at least annually.
Provide lifestyle counseling (diet, exercise, tobacco cessation) at any BP level.
Screening in dental settings proven effective because many pts unaware of HTN.
Review Prompts
Device name? Sphygmomanometer.
Normal adult BP? Approximately <120/80\,\text{mmHg}.
Resting Vital Sign Reference (Table 12-1 Excerpt)
(Converted key values into concise bullets)
Temperature: Infants 99.4–99.7^\circ\text{F} → Adults 97–99^\circ\text{F}.
Pulse: Infants 80–160\,\text{bpm} → Adults 60–100\,\text{bpm}.
Respirations: Infants 30–60\,\text{rpm} → Adults 12–20\,\text{rpm}.
BP: Systolic rises with age; by ≥13 y target 104–<120/60–<80\,\text{mmHg}.
Consolidated Numeric “Cheat Sheet”
Temp dismissal cutoff (clinic): \ge100.4^\circ\text{F}.
Adult benchmarks:
Pulse 60–100\,\text{bpm} (Tachy >100, Brady <50).
RR 12–20\,\text{rpm} (Tachy >28, Brady <12).
BP categories per ACC/AHA (see above table).
Hypertensive crisis: \ge180/120\,\text{mmHg}.
Maximum Inflation Level: Estimated SBP + 30\,\text{mmHg}.
Practical / Ethical / Real-World Connections
Early detection of fever prevents spread of infection & cross-contamination in dental office.
Identifying HTN in dental settings reduces national burden of stroke & CVD; supports inter-professional care.
Respiration monitoring critical for local anesthetic + nitrous oxide administration; abnormal RR signals sedation or medical emergency.
Pulse & BP guidance help tailor epinephrine dosage in local anesthetics for cardiac-compromised pts.
Memes & Humor References (Contextual Examples)
“No thermometer…No fever!” meme underscores false assumptions; always verify clinically.
Labor vs. male fever meme highlights perceived severity but clinically objective thresholds matter.
“Picture it, Sicily 1912” Golden Girls meme: reminder not to skip counting respirations out of habit.
“You claimed you don’t have high BP” meme: stresses medication cross-check with medical history.
End-of-Lecture Reminder
“EVERYTHING IS IMPORTANT!” — All vitals interrelate; accurate technique & documentation are non-negotiable for patient safety.