A nurse is planning the care of a patient who has undergone orthopedic surgery. What main goal should guide the nurse's choice of interventions?
- A. Improving the patient's level of function
- B. Helping the patient come to terms with limitations
- C. Administering medications safely
- D. Improving the patient's adherence to treatment
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Improving function is the overarching goal after orthopedic surgery. Some patients may need to come to terms with limitations, but this is not true of every patient. Safe medication administration is imperative, but this is not a goal that guides other aspects of care. Similarly, adherence to treatment is important, but this is motivated by the need to improve functional status.
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The nurse educator on an orthopedic trauma unit is reviewing the safe and effective use of traction with some recent nursing graduates. What principle should the educator promote?
- A. Knots in the rope should not be resting against pulleys.
- B. Weights should rest against the bed rails.
- C. The end of the limb in traction should be braced by the footboard of the bed.
- D. Skeletal traction may be removed for brief periods to facilitate the patient's independence.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Knots in the rope should not rest against pulleys, because this interferes with traction. Weights are used to apply the vector of force necessary to achieve effective traction and should hang freely at all times. To avoid interrupting traction, the limb in traction should not rest against anything. Skeletal traction is never interrupted.
A nurse is caring for a patient who has a leg cast. The nurse observes that the patient uses a pencil to scratch the skin under the edge of the cast. How should the nurse respond to this observation?
- A. Allow the patient to continue to scratch inside the cast with a pencil but encourage him to be cautious.
- B. Give the patient a sterile tongue depressor to use for scratching instead of the pencil.
- C. Encourage the patient to avoid scratching, and obtain an order for an antihistamine if severe itching persists.
- D. Obtain an order for a sedative, such as lorazepam (Ativan), to prevent the patient from scratching.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Scratching should be discouraged because of the risk for skin breakdown or damage to the cast. Most patients can be discouraged from scratching if given a mild antihistamine, such as diphenhydramine, to relieve itching. Benzodiazepines would not be given for this purpose.
A patient was brought to the emergency department after a fall. The patient is taken to the operating room to receive a right hip prosthesis. In the immediate postoperative period, what health education should the nurse emphasize?
- A. Make sure you don't bring your knees close together.
- B. Try to lie as still as possible for the first few days.
- C. Try to avoid bending your knees until next week.
- D. Keep your legs higher than your chest whenever you can.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: After receiving a hip prosthesis, the affected leg should be kept abducted. Mobility should be encouraged within safe limits. There is no need to avoid knee flexion and the patient's legs do not need to be higher than the level of the chest.
A patient broke his arm in a sports accident and required the application of a cast. Shortly following application, the patient complained of an inability to straighten his fingers and was subsequently diagnosed with Volkmann contracture. What pathophysiologic process caused this complication?
- A. Obstructed arterial blood flow to the forearm and hand
- B. Simultaneous pressure on the ulnar and radial nerves
- C. Irritation of Merkel cells in the patient's skin surfaces
- D. Uncontrolled muscle spasms in the patient's forearm
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Volkmann contracture occurs when arterial blood flow is restricted to the forearm and hand and results in contractures of the fingers and wrist. It does not result from nerve pressure, skin irritation, or spasms.
A nurse is assessing a patient who is receiving traction. The nurse's assessment confirms that the patient is able to perform plantar flexion. What conclusion can the nurse draw from this finding?
- A. The leg that was assessed is free from DVT.
- B. The patient's tibial nerve is functional.
- C. Circulation to the distal extremity is adequate.
- D. The patient does not have peripheral neurovascular dysfunction.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Plantar flexion demonstrates function of the tibial nerve. It does not demonstrate the absence of DVT and does not allow the nurse to ascertain adequate circulation. The nurse must perform more assessments on more sites in order to determine an absence of peripheral neurovascular dysfunction.
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