A pregnant client in her second trimester has a hemoglobin level of 11 g/dL. The nurse interprets this as indicating:
- A. Hemoconcentration by hypertension
- B. A multiple gestation pregnancy
- C. Greater-than-expected weight gain
- D. Iron-deficiency anemia
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: A hemoglobin of 11 g/dL is low for the second trimester (10.5-14 g/dL), suggesting iron-deficiency anemia, especially with symptoms like fatigue. Hemoconcentration raises hemoglobin, multiple gestation lowers it slightly, and weight gain is unrelated.
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A nurse is planning a presentation about HIV for a church-based group. Which of the following information about HIV transmission should the nurse include?
- A. It is primarily transmitted through mosquitoes.
- B. It is primarily transmitted through accidental puncture wounds.
- C. It is primarily transmitted through casual contact.
- D. It is primarily transmitted through direct contact with infected body fluids.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: HIV spreads mainly through direct contact with infected fluids (blood, semen, vaginal fluid), like during sex or needle sharing. Mosquitoes, casual contact, and puncture wounds (rare) aren't primary modes.
After reviewing the information provided in the client's medical record, which of the following complications should the nurse identify that the client is at risk of developing?
- A. Preeclampsia; uric acid
- B. Gestational diabetes; glucose
- C. Eclampsia; magnesium
- D. Placenta previa; hemoglobin
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Gestational diabetes risk is linked to glucose intolerance, detectable by serum glucose levels, causing complications like macrosomia. Preeclampsia involves hypertension, not uric acid alone; eclampsia isn't tied to magnesium levels; placenta previa relates to prior surgeries, not hemoglobin.
A client with hyperemesis gravidarum is admitted to the facility after being cared for at home without success. What would the nurse expect to include in the client's plan of care?
- A. clear liquid diet
- B. administration of diethylstilbestrol
- C. total parenteral nutrition
- D. nothing by mouth
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Hyperemesis gravidarum causes severe vomiting, risking dehydration and malnutrition. Total parenteral nutrition delivers complete nutrients intravenously, addressing these risks when oral intake fails. Clear liquids or nothing by mouth worsen malnutrition, and diethylstilbestrol, a discontinued drug, is irrelevant.
A nurse is preparing to administer penicillin G benzathine 1.2 million units IM now. The amount available is penicillin G benzathine 600,000 units/mL. How many mL should the nurse administer?
- A. 2 mL
- B. 1 mL
- C. 3 mL
- D. 4 mL
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Formula: volume = dose / concentration. 1,200,000 units / 600,000 units/mL = 2 mL. Other options result from incorrect division or rounding errors.
During a prenatal visit, a pregnant woman says, 'I know the amniotic fluid is important, but can you tell me more about it?' When describing amniotic fluid to a pregnant woman, which description would the nurse most likely include?
- A. This fluid acts as a cushion to help protect your baby from injury.
- B. The amount of fluid remains fairly constant throughout the pregnancy.
- C. The fluid is mostly protein to provide nourishment to your baby.
- D. This fluid acts as a transport mechanism for oxygen and nutrients.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Amniotic fluid cushions the fetus against injury, aiding movement and growth. Its volume varies (peaks at term), is mostly water (not protein), and doesn't transport oxygen or nutrients, which the placenta handles.