Intraoperative Nursing Coordination in Hemostasis Management for Liver Tumor Resection
Abstract
Objective: To explore the role of nursing coordination in hemostasis
management during liver tumor resection. Methods: Eighty-six patients undergoing liver tumor resection between June 2024 and May 2025 were randomly
assigned to either a conventional nursing group (n=43) or a nursing coordination
group (n=43) and the coordination group (n =43). Conventional nursing and
nursing coordination protocols were applied during surgery, respectively. The
surgical indicators (operation time, intraoperative blood loss, blood transfusion
volume), coagulation function indicators (APTT, PT, FIB), stress hormone levels
(NE, Cor), and complication incidence (bleeding, infection, liver failure) were
compared between the two groups. Results: The coordination group had significantly shorter operation time, reduced intraoperative blood loss, and lower transfusion volume compared to the conventional group (P<0.05). At 24 hours after
operation, PT and APTT in the coordination group were lower than those in the
conventional group, while FIB and PLT were higher than those in the conventional group, P <0.05. The levels of epinephrine and norepinephrine in the coordination group were lower than those in the conventional group at 24 hours after
operationP <0.05. The complication incidence in the coordination group was
lower than that in the conventional group, P <0.05. Conclusion: The nursing coordination mode during liver tumor resection has a good implementation effect,
which can reduce the operation time, intraoperative blood loss and blood transfusion volume, improve the coagulation function indicators of patients, alleviate
the stress response, and reduce complications, which is worthy of promotion.
Copyright (c) 2025 Yaqian Lai, Haiwei Zhang, Ying Ye, Qiqiq Li

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