A client is seen in the orthopedic clinic for complaints of severe pain in the left hip. After a series of diagnostic tests, the client is diagnosed with severe degenerative joint disease of the left hip and suggested to have the hip reconstructed. What procedure will the nurse schedule the client for?
- A. Left hip arthroplasty
- B. Left hip arthroscopy
- C. Open reduction and internal fixation of the left hip.
- D. Closed reduction of the left hip.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Clients with arthritis, trauma, hip fracture, or a congenital deformity may have an arthroplasty, or reconstruction of the joint. This procedure uses an artificial joint that restores previously lost function and relieves pain. An arthroscopy is not used to reconstruct a diseased hip. A closed reduction is not an invasive surgical procedure and would not be used to reconstruct the hip. An open reduction and internal fixation is not the treatment for reconstruction of the hip related to a diseased hip.
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The nurse is caring for a client who had a surgical amputation of the left leg related to complication from diabetes. The client asks the nurse: 'If my leg is really gone, then why am I having such bad pain?' What is an appropriate response by the nurse?
- A. You are only imagining that you are having pain.
- B. It is called phantom pain and may come and go.
- C. You will continue to have this pain, and you will have to learn to ignore it.
- D. This is called false pain and is a brain dysfunction.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Phantom pain is pain or other discomfort, such as burning, tingling, throbbing, or itching. Pain felt from the phantom limb can be an extremely serious problem in relation to the client's emotional status and ability to use prosthesis. The other responses are nontherapeutic.
The nurse is caring for a patient with a fractured right femur who is not a candidate to repair the femur immediately. What intervention should the nurse anticipate the physician will order to relieve muscle spasm and pain until surgery is performed?
- A. Skeletal traction
- B. Skin traction
- C. Open reduction
- D. External fixator
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: If surgery for a fracture cannot be performed right away, Buck's traction or other skin traction may be applied to relieve muscle spasm and pain until surgery is performed. The other distractors all require surgical intervention.
A client has had a knee replacement and will be discharged in the morning. What does the nurse understand is the goal for bending the knee by discharge?
- A. 15?°
- B. 30?°
- C. 60?°
- D. 90?°
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: The goal for the client to have the ability to bend the knee 90?° by discharge. The other answers are incorrect.
The nurse is caring for a client who had an amputation of the left leg above the knee. What position can the nurse place the client in several times per day to promote stump extension and prevent contractures?
- A. Supine
- B. Left lateral
- C. Prone
- D. Right lateral
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Place the client with leg amputation in the prone position several times a day. This position promotes stump extension and prevents contractures. The other positions do neither of these things.
A client having a cast applied for a fractured leg that extends from below the knee to the base of the toes. The foot is flexed at a right angle in a neutral position. What type of cast is the client having applied?
- A. Short leg cast
- B. Long leg cast
- C. Walking cast
- D. Hip spica cast
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: A short leg cast extends from below the knee to the base of the toes. The foot is flexed at a right angle in a neutral position. A long leg cast extends from the junction of the upper and middle third of the thigh to the base of the toes. The knee may be slightly flexed. A walking cast is a short or long leg cast reinforced for strength. A hip spica cast encloses the trunk and a lower extremity.
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