A patient with HF is placed on a low-sodium diet. Which statement by the patient indicates that the nurses nutritional teaching plan has been effective?
- A. I will have a ham and cheese sandwich for lunch
- B. I will have a baked potato with broiled chicken for dinner
- C. I will have a tossed salad with cheese and croutons for lunch
- D. I will have chicken noodle soup with crackers and an apple for lunch
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The patients choice of a baked potato with broiled chicken indicates that the teaching plan has been effective. Potatoes and chicken are relatively low in sodium. Ham, cheese, and soup are often high in sodium.
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A patient presents to the ED complaining of increasing shortness of breath. The nurse assessing the patient notes a history of left-sided HF. The patient is agitated and occasionally coughing up pink-tinged, foamy sputum. The nurse should recognize the signs and symptoms of what health problem?
- A. Right-sided heart failure
- B. Acute pulmonary edema
- C. Pneumonia
- D. Cardiogenic shock
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Because of decreased contractility and increased fluid volume and pressure in patients with HF, fluid may be driven from the pulmonary capillary beds into the alveoli, causing pulmonary edema and signs and symptoms described. In right-sided heart failure, the patient exhibits hepatomegaly, jugular vein distention, and peripheral edema. In pneumonia, the patient would have a temperature spike, and sputum that varies in color. Cardiogenic shock would show signs of hypotension and tachycardia.
The nurse is reviewing the medication administration record of a patient diagnosed with systolic HF. What medication should the nurse anticipate administering to this patient?
- A. A beta-adrenergic blocker
- B. An antiplatelet aggregator
- C. A calcium channel blocker
- D. A nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID)
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Several medications are routinely prescribed for systolic HF, including ACE inhibitors, beta-blockers, diuretics, and digitalis. Calcium channel blockers, antiplatelet aggregators, and NSAIDs are not commonly prescribed.
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation has been initiated on a patient who was found unresponsive. When performing chest compressions, the nurse should do which of the following?
- A. Perform at least 100 chest compressions per minute
- B. Pause to allow a colleague to provide a breath every 10 compressions
- C. Pause chest compressions to allow for vital signs monitoring every 4 to 5 minutes
- D. Perform high-quality chest compressions as rapidly as possible
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: During CPR, the chest is compressed 2 inches at a rate of at least 100 compressions per minute. This rate is the resuscitators goal; the aim is not to give compressions as rapidly as possible. Compressions are not stopped after 10 compressions to allow for a breath or for full vital signs monitoring.
The nurse is assessing a patient who is known to have right-sided HF. What assessment finding is most consistent with this patients diagnosis?
- A. Pulmonary edema
- B. Distended neck veins
- C. Dry cough
- D. Orthopnea
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Right-sided HF may manifest by distended neck veins, dependent edema, hepatomegaly, weight gain, ascites, anorexia, nausea, nocturia, and weakness. The other answers do not apply.
A nurse in the CCU is caring for a patient with HF who has developed an intracardiac thrombus. This creates a high risk for what sequela?
- A. Stroke
- B. Myocardial infarction (MI)
- C. Hemorrhage
- D. Peripheral edema
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Intracardiac thrombi can become lodged in the cerebral vasculature, causing stroke. There is no direct risk of MI, hemorrhage, or peripheral edema.
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