A nurse practitioner has provided care for three different patients with chronic pharyngitis over the past several months. Which patients are at greatest risk for developing chronic pharyngitis?
- A. Patients who are habitual users of alcohol and tobacco
- B. Patients who are habitual users of caffeine and other stimulants
- C. Patients who eat a diet high in spicy foods
- D. Patients who have gastrointestinal reflux disease (GERD)
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Chronic pharyngitis is common in adults who live and work in dusty surroundings, use the voice to excess, suffer from chronic cough, and habitually use alcohol and tobacco. Caffeine and spicy foods have not been linked to chronic pharyngitis. GERD is not a noted risk factor.
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A patient states that her family has had several colds during this winter and spring despite their commitment to handwashing. The high communicability of the common cold is attributable to what factor?
- A. Cold viruses are increasingly resistant to common antibiotics.
- B. The virus is shed for 2 days prior to the emergence of symptoms.
- C. A genetic predisposition to viral rhinitis has recently been identified.
- D. Overuse of OTC cold remedies creates a rebound susceptibility to future colds.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Colds are highly contagious because virus is shed for about 2 days before the symptoms appear and during the first part of the symptomatic phase. Antibiotic resistance is not relevant to viral illnesses and OTC medications do not have a rebound effect. Genetic factors do not exist.
The nurse is caring for a patient whose recent unexplained weight loss and history of smoking have prompted diagnostic testing for cancer. What symptom is most closely associated with the early stages of laryngeal cancer?
- A. Hoarseness
- B. Dyspnea
- C. Dysphagia
- D. Frequent nosebleeds
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Hoarseness is an early symptom of laryngeal cancer. Dyspnea, dysphagia, and lumps are later signs of laryngeal cancer. Alopecia is not associated with a diagnosis of laryngeal cancer.
The nurse is caring for a patient who has just been diagnosed with chronic rhinosinusitis. While being admitted to the clinic, the patient asks, Will this chronic infection hurt my new kidney? What should the nurse know about chronic rhinosinusitis in patients who have had a transplant?
- A. The patient will have exaggerated symptoms of rhinosinusitis due to immunosuppression.
- B. Taking immunosuppressive drugs can contribute to chronic rhinosinusitis.
- C. Chronic rhinosinusitis can damage the transplanted organ.
- D. Immunosuppressive drugs can cause organ rejection.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: URIs, specifically chronic rhinosinusitis and recurrent acute rhinosinusitis, may be linked to primary or secondary immune deficiency or treatment with immunosuppressive therapy (i.e., for cancer or organ transplantation). Typical symptoms may be blunted or absent due to immunosuppression. No evidence indicates damage to the transplanted organ due to chronic rhinosinusitis. Immunosuppressive drugs do not cause organ rejection.
The occupational health nurse is obtaining a patient history during a pre-employment physical. During the history, the patient states that he has hereditary angioedema. The nurse should identify what implication of this health condition?
- A. It will result in increased loss of work days.
- B. It may cause episodes of weakness due to reduced cardiac output.
- C. It can cause life-threatening airway obstruction.
- D. It is unlikely to interfere with the individuals health.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Hereditary angioedema is an inherited condition that is characterized by episodes of life-threatening laryngeal edema. No information supports lost days of work or reduced cardiac function.
A patients total laryngectomy has created a need for alaryngeal speech which will be achieved through the use of tracheoesophageal puncture. What action should the nurse describe to the patient when teaching him about this process?
- A. Training on how to perform controlled belching
- B. Use of an electronically enhanced artificial pharynx
- C. Insertion of a specialized nasogastric tube
- D. Fitting for a voice prosthesis
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: In patients receiving transesophageal puncture, a valve is placed in the tracheal stoma to divert air into the esophagus and out the mouth. Once the puncture is surgically created and has healed, a voice prosthesis (Blom-Singer) is fitted over the puncture site. A nasogastric tube and belching are not required. An artificial pharynx is not used.
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