During the postoperative period, the client who underwent a pelvic exenteration reports pain in the calf area. What action should the nurse take?
- A. Ask the client to walk and observe the gait.
- B. Lightly massage the calf area to relieve the pain.
- C. Check the calf area for temperature, color, and size.
- D. Administer PRN morphine sulfate as prescribed for postoperative pain.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The nurse monitors the postoperative client for complications such as deep vein thrombosis, pulmonary emboli, and wound infection. Pain in the calf area could indicate a deep vein thrombosis. Change in color, temperature, or size of the client's calf could also indicate this complication. Options 1 and 2 could result in an embolus if in fact the client had a deep vein thrombosis. Administering pain medication for this client is not the appropriate nursing action since further assessment needs to take place.
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The nurse plans care for a client requiring intravenous (IV) fluids and electrolytes understanding that which are findings that correlate with the need for this type of therapy? Select all that apply.
- A. Hyponatremia
- B. Bounding pulse rate
- C. Chronic kidney disease
- D. Isolated syncope episodes
- E. Rapid, weak, and thready pulse
- F. Abnormal serum and urine osmolality levels
Correct Answer: A,E,F
Rationale: Abnormal assessment findings of major body systems offer clues to fluid and electrolyte imbalances. Rapid, weak, and thready pulse is an assessment abnormality found with fluid and electrolyte imbalances, such as hyponatremia. Abnormal serum and urine osmolality are laboratory tests that are helpful in identifying the presence of or risk of fluid imbalances. Isolated episodes of syncope are not indicators for intravenous therapy unless fluid and electrolyte imbalances are identified. A bounding pulse rate is a manifestation of fluid volume excess; therefore, IV fluids are not indicated. Clients with chronic kidney disease experience the inability of the kidneys to regulate the body's water balance; fluid restrictions may be used.
While providing care to a client with a head injury, the nurse notes that a client exhibits this posture (refer to figure). What should the nurse document that the client is exhibiting?
- A. Flaccidity
- B. Decorticate posturing
- C. Decerebrate posturing
- D. Rigidity in the upper extremities
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Decortication is abnormal posturing seen in the client with lesions that interrupt the corticospinal pathways. In this posturing, the client's arms, wrists, and fingers are flexed with internal rotation and plantar flexion of the feet and legs extended. Flaccidity indicates weak, soft, and flabby muscles that lack normal muscle tone. Decerebration is abnormal posturing and rigidity characterized by extension of the arms and legs, pronation of the arms, plantar flexion, and opisthotonos. Decerebration is usually associated with dysfunction in the brainstem area. Rigidity indicates hardness, stiffness, or inflexibility. Decerebrate posturing is associated with rigidity.
The nurse provides discharge instructions to a client beginning oral hypoglycemic therapy. Which statements if made by the client indicate a need for further teaching? Select all that apply.
- A. If I am ill, I should skip my daily dose.
- B. If I overeat, I will double my dosage of medication.
- C. Oral agents are effective in managing type 2 diabetes.
- D. If I become pregnant, I will discontinue my medication.
- E. Oral hypoglycemic medications will cause my urine to turn orange.
- F. My medications are used to manage my diabetes along with diet and exercise.
Correct Answer: A,B,D,E
Rationale: Clients are instructed that oral agents are used in addition to diet and exercise as therapy for diabetes mellitus. During illness or periods of intense stress, the client should be instructed to monitor her or his blood glucose level frequently and should contact the primary health care provider if the blood glucose is elevated because insulin may be needed to prevent symptoms of acute hyperglycemia. The medication should not be skipped or the dosage should not be doubled. Taking extra medication should be avoided unless specifically prescribed by the primary health care provider. Medication should never be discontinued unless instructed to do so by the primary health care provider. However, the diabetic who becomes pregnant will need to contact her primary health care provider because the oral diabetic medication may have to be changed to insulin therapy because some oral hypoglycemics can be harmful to the fetus. These medications do not change the color of the urine.
The nurse performs the Glasgow Coma Scale while assessing a client with a brainstem injury. Which additional interventions should the nurse be prepared to implement? Select all that apply.
- A. Assisting with arterial blood gases
- B. Assisting with a lumbar puncture
- C. Assessing cranial nerve functioning
- D. Assessing respiratory rate and rhythm
- E. Assessing pulmonary wedge pressure
- F. Assessing cognitive abilities, including memory
Correct Answer: C,D
Rationale: Assessment should be specific to the area of the brain involved. Assessing the respiratory status and cranial nerve function is a critical component of the assessment process in a client with a brainstem injury because the respiratory center is located in the brainstem. Options 1, 2, 5, and 6 are not necessary based on the data in the question.
The nurse who has been closely monitoring a child who has been exhibiting decorticate (flexor) posturing notes that the child suddenly exhibits decerebrate (extensor) posturing. The nurse interprets that this change in the child's posturing indicates what?
- A. An insignificant finding
- B. An improvement in condition
- C. Decreasing intracranial pressure
- D. Deteriorating neurological function
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: The progression from decorticate to decerebrate posturing usually indicates deteriorating neurological function and warrants primary health care provider notification. Options 1, 2, and 3 are inaccurate interpretations.