A nurse is caring for a patient who has had surgery for oral cancer. The combination of medications and radiotherapy has resulted in leukopenia. Which of the following is an appropriate response to this change in health status?
- A. Ensure that none of the patients visitors has an infection.
- B. Arrange for a diet that is high in protein and low in fat.
- C. Administer colony stimulating factors (CSFs) as ordered.
- D. Prepare to administer chemotherapeutics as ordered.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Leukopenia reduces defense mechanisms, increasing the risk of infections. Visitors who might transmit microorganisms are prohibited if the patients immunologic system is depressed. Changes in diet, CSFs, and the use of chemotherapy do not resolve leukopenia.
You may also like to solve these questions
A nurse is caring for a patient who is postoperative from a neck dissection. What would be the most appropriate nursing action to enhance the patients appetite?
- A. Encourage the family to bring in the patients favored foods.
- B. Limit visitors at mealtimes so that the patient is not distracted.
- C. Avoid offering food unless the patient initiates.
- D. Provide thorough oral care immediately after the patient eats.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Family involvement and home-cooked favorite foods may help the patient to eat. Having visitors at mealtimes may make eating more pleasant and increase the patients appetite. The nurse should not place the complete onus for initiating meals on the patient. Oral care after meals is necessary, but does not influence appetite.
A nurse is caring for a patient who is postoperative day 1 following neck dissection surgery. The nurse is performing an assessment of the patient and notes the presence of high-pitched adventitious sounds over the patients trachea on auscultation. The patients oxygen saturation is 90% by pulse oximetry with a respiratory rate of 31 breaths per minute. What is the nurses most appropriate action?
- A. Encourage the patient to perform deep breathing and coughing exercises hourly.
- B. Reposition the patient into a prone or semi-Fowlers position and apply supplementary oxygen by nasal cannula.
- C. Activate the emergency response system.
- D. Report this finding promptly to the physician and remain with the patient.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: In the immediate postoperative period, the nurse assesses for stridor (coarse, high-pitched sound on inspiration) by listening frequently over the trachea with a stethoscope. This finding must be reported immediately because it indicates obstruction of the airway. The patients current status does not warrant activation of the emergency response system, and encouraging deep breathing and repositioning the patient are inadequate responses.
A patient has been diagnosed with a malignancy of the oral cavity and is undergoing oncologic treatment. The oncologic nurse is aware that the prognosis for recovery from head and neck cancers is often poor because of what characteristic of these malignancies?
- A. Radiation therapy often results in secondary brain tumors.
- B. Surgical complications are exceedingly common.
- C. Diagnosis rarely occurs until the cancer is endstage.
- D. Metastases are common and respond poorly to treatment.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Deaths from malignancies of the head and neck are primarily attributable to local-regional metastasis to the cervical lymph nodes in the neck. This often occurs by way of the lymphatics before the primary lesion has been treated. This local-regional metastasis is not amenable to surgical resection and responds poorly to chemotherapy and radiation therapy. This high mortality rate is not related to surgical complications, late diagnosis, or the development of brain tumors.
The nurses comprehensive assessment of a patient includes inspection for signs of oral cancer. What assessment finding is most characteristic of oral cancer in its early stages?
- A. Dull pain radiating to the ears and teeth
- B. Presence of a painless sore with raised edges
- C. Areas of tenderness that make chewing difficult
- D. Diffuse inflammation of the buccal mucosa
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Malignant lesions of the oral cavity are most often painless lumps or sores with raised borders. Because they do not bother the patient, delay in seeking treatment occurs frequently, and negatively affects prognosis. Dull pain radiating to the ears and teeth is characteristic of malocclusion. Inflammation of the buccal mucosa causes discomfort and often occurs as a side effect of chemotherapy. Tenderness resulting in pain on chewing may be associated with gingivitis, abscess, irritation from dentures, and other causes. Pain related to oral cancer is a late symptom.
A nurse is caring for a patient in the late stages of esophageal cancer. The nurse should plan to prevent or address what characteristics of this stage of the disease?
- A. Perforation into the mediastinum
- B. Development of an esophageal lesion
- C. Erosion into the great vessels
- D. Painful swallowing
- E. Obstruction of the esophagus
Correct Answer: A,C,E
Rationale: In the later stages of esophageal cancer, obstruction of the esophagus is noted, with possible perforation into the mediastinum and erosion into the great vessels. Painful swallowing and the emergence of a lesion are early signs of esophageal cancer.
Nokea