A male client with angina pectoris has been having an increased number of episodes of pain recently. He is admitted for observation. During the admission interview, he tells the nurse that he has been having chest pain during the last week. Which statement by the client would be of greatest concern to the nurse?
- A. I had chest pain while I was walking in the snow on Thursday.'
- B. We went out for a big dinner to celebrate my wife's birthday, but I couldn't enjoy it because I got the pain before we got home from the restaurant.'
- C. I had chest pain yesterday while I was sitting in the living room watching television.'
- D. I felt pain all the way down my left arm after I was playing with my grandson on Monday.'
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Chest pain at rest, such as while watching television, is concerning as it may indicate unstable angina or impending myocardial infarction, requiring urgent evaluation. Pain with activity, eating, or radiating to the arm is typical of angina but less immediately alarming.
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The nurse identifies the concept of perfusion for a client diagnosed with congestive heart failure. Which assessment data support this concept?
- A. The client has a large abdomen and a positive tympanic wave.
- B. The client has paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea.
- C. The client has 2+ glucose in the urine.
- D. The client has a comorbid condition of myocardial infarction.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: PND (B) indicates fluid overload in CHF, supporting impaired perfusion. Large abdomen (A) suggests ascites, glucosuria (C) is diabetes-related, and MI (D) is a cause, not a symptom.
An adult male has a high level of high-density lipoproteins (HDL) in proportion to low-density lipoproteins (LDL). How does this relate to his risk of developing coronary artery disease (CAD)?
- A. His risk for CAD is low.
- B. There is no direct correlation.
- C. His risk may increase with exercise.
- D. His risk will increase with age.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: A high HDL-to-LDL ratio is protective against coronary artery disease, lowering risk due to HDL’s role in removing cholesterol from arteries.
The client diagnosed with pericarditis is being discharged home. Which intervention should the nurse include in the discharge teaching?
- A. Be sure to allow for uninterrupted rest and sleep.
- B. Refer the client to outpatient occupational therapy.
- C. Maintain oxygen via nasal cannula at two (2) L/min.
- D. Discuss upcoming valve replacement surgery.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Rest and sleep (A) reduce cardiac demand in pericarditis. Occupational therapy (B), oxygen (C), and valve surgery (D) are not indicated.
The telemetry nurse is unable to read the telemetry monitor at the nurse’s station. Which intervention should the telemetry nurse implement first?
- A. Go to the client's room to check the client.
- B. Instruct the primary nurse to assess the client.
- C. Contact the client on the client call system.
- D. Request the nursing assistant to take the crash cart to the client's room.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: An unreadable monitor (A) requires direct client assessment to ensure safety. Instructing another nurse (B), calling (C), or crash cart (D) are premature without assessment.
If the client's severe chest pain is typical of other people who experience myocardial infarction (MI), the client is most likely to tell the nurse that the discomfort radiates to which area?
- A. Flank
- B. Groin
- C. Abdomen
- D. Shoulder
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: MI pain typically radiates to the shoulder, arm, or jaw due to referred pain from cardiac ischemia.
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