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Understanding Sensory Perception and Alterations

Apr 28, 2025

Sensory Perception

Presented by Sharon Celestine, Clinical Instructor at Delado Community College

Student Learning Outcomes

  • Explain common causes and effects of sensory alteration
  • Discuss sensory perceptual changes with aging
  • Outline ways to maintain a safe environment for patients with sensory deficit
  • Differentiate between presbyopia, myopia, cataracts, glaucoma, and macular degeneration
  • Use health language related to sensory perception appropriately
  • Utilize the nursing process for patients with sensory perceptual alteration

What is Sensory Perception?

  • Perception: Use of senses to understand the world
  • Sensory Perception: Gained through light, taste, touch, or hearing
  • Five Basic Senses: Touch, sight, hearing, smell, and taste
  • Sensory Reception vs. Sensory Perception:
    • Reception: Receiving stimuli via sensory organs
    • Perception: Awareness and interpretation of stimuli in the brain

Memory and Sensory Perception

  • Short-term Memory: Holds information briefly
  • Long-term Memory: Formed by paying attention and processing
  • Types of Sensory Memory: Iconic (visual) and Echoic (sound)

Alterations in Sensory Perception

  • Affects ability to connect and function safely in the environment
  • Causes: Aging, genetics, illness, lifestyle factors, pharmacological causes

Sensory Changes with Aging

  • Iris accommodation decreases
  • Pupil reaction less brisk
  • Peripheral vision diminishes
  • Light glare adaptation decreases
  • Visual changes due to lens elasticity loss
  • Impact of comorbidities: diabetes, cardiovascular disease

Nursing Process for Sensory Perception

Assessment

  • Observation, patient interview, mental status exam
  • Identify risk factors, safety factors, support network

Diagnosis

  • Related to safety, cognition, communication, self-care

Planning

  • Incorporate health promotion, chronic disease education, safety from injury

Implementation/Intervention

  • Independent: Assess understanding, promote safety, educate, monitor adherence
  • Collaborative: Involve other professionals, administer meds, assist with procedures

Patient Teaching

  • Eye exams every 2-3 years, annually if at risk
  • Audiology exams every 10 years, PRN for changes
  • Use of assisted devices like eyeglasses, adequate lighting
  • Strategies for effective communication

Specific Conditions

Myopia

  • Nearsightedness where distant objects are blurred
  • Caused by eyeball shape or corneal curve

Presbyopia

  • Age-related farsightedness
  • Symptoms: Need to hold materials at arm's length, blurred vision

Cataracts

  • Cloudy lens, impacts light transmission
  • Treatment: Surgery to replace cloudy lens
  • Post-op care: Light activity, eye protection

Glaucoma

  • Group of eye conditions causing blindness
  • Damages eye nerve due to high pressure
  • Types: Open-angle (slow loss), angle-closure (emergency)

Macular Degeneration

  • Leading cause of vision impairment in older adults
  • Affects the retina, causing central vision loss

Presented by Sharon Celestine