A patient is receiving thrombolytic therapy for the treatment of pulmonary emboli. What is the best way for the nurse to assess the patients oxygenation status at the bedside?
- A. Obtain serial ABG samples
- B. Monitor pulse oximetry readings
- C. Test pulmonary function
- D. Monitor incentive spirometry volumes
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The nurse assesses the patient with pulmonary emboli frequently for signs of hypoxemia and monitors the pulse oximetry values to evaluate the effectiveness of the oxygen therapy. ABGs are accurate indicators of oxygenation status, but are not analyzed at the bedside. PFTs and incentive spirometry volumes do not accurately reveal oxygenation status.
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The nurse is caring for a patient who has been in a motor vehicle accident and the care team suspects that the patient has developed pleurisy. Which of the nurses assessment findings would best corroborate this diagnosis?
- A. The patient is experiencing painless hemoptysis
- B. The patients arterial blood gases (ABGs) are normal, but he demonstrates increased work of breathing
- C. The patients oxygen saturation level is below 88%, but he denies shortness of breath
- D. The patients pain intensifies when he coughs or takes a deep breath
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: The key characteristic of pleuritic pain is its relationship to respiratory movement. Taking a deep breath, coughing, or sneezing worsens the pain. The patients ABGs would most likely be abnormal and shortness of breath would be expected.
A gerontologic nurse is teaching a group of medical nurses about the high incidence and mortality of pneumonia in older adults. What is a contributing factor to this that the nurse should describe?
- A. Older adults have less compliant lung tissue than younger adults
- B. Older adults are not normally candidates for pneumococcal vaccination
- C. Older adults often lack the classic signs and symptoms of pneumonia
- D. Older adults often cannot tolerate the most common antibiotics used to treat pneumonia
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The diagnosis of pneumonia may be missed because the classic symptoms of cough, chest pain, sputum production, and fever may be absent or masked in older adult patients. Mortality from pneumonia in the elderly is not a result of limited antibiotic options or lower lung compliance. The pneumococcal vaccine is appropriate for older adults.
While planning a patients care, the nurse identifies nursing actions to minimize the patients pleuritic pain. Which intervention should the nurse include in the plan of care?
- A. Avoid actions that will cause the patient to breathe deeply
- B. Ambulate the patient at least three times daily
- C. Arrange for a soft-textured diet and increased fluid intake
- D. Encourage the patient to speak as little as possible
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: The key characteristic of pleuritic pain is its relationship to respiratory movement. Taking a deep breath, coughing, or sneezing worsens the pain. A soft diet is not necessarily indicated and there is no need for the patient to avoid speaking. Ambulation has multiple benefits, but pain management is not among them.
The nurse is reviewing the electronic health record of a patient with an empyema. What health problem in the patients history is most likely to have caused the empyema?
- A. Smoking
- B. Asbestosis
- C. Pneumonia
- D. Lung cancer
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Most empyemas occur as complications of bacterial pneumonia or lung abscess. Cancer, smoking, and asbestosis are not noted to be common causes.
The nurse is caring for an 82-year-old patient with a diagnosis of tracheobronchitis. The patient begins complaining of right-sided chest pain that gets worse when he coughs or breathes deeply. Vital signs are within normal limits. What would you suspect this patient is experiencing?
- A. Traumatic pneumothorax
- B. Empyema
- C. Pleuritic pain
- D. Myocardial infarction
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The key characteristic of pleuritic pain is its relationship to respiratory movement. Taking a deep breath, coughing, or sneezing worsens the pain. Pleuritic pain is limited in distribution rather than diffuse; it usually occurs only on one side. The pain may become minimal or absent when the breath is held. It may be localized or radiate to the shoulder or abdomen. Later, as pleural fluid develops, the pain decreases. The scenario does not indicate any trauma to the patient, so a traumatic pneumothorax is implausible. Empyema is unlikely as there is no fever indicative of infection. Myocardial infarction would affect the patients vital signs profoundly.
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