An emergency department nurse assesses a client with a history of urinary incontinence who presents with extreme dry mouth, constipation, and an inability to void. Which question should the nurse ask first?
- A. Are you drinking plenty of water?
- B. What medications are you taking?
- C. Have you tried laxatives or enemas?
- D. Has this type of thing ever happened before?
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Some types of incontinence are treated with anticholinergic medications such as propantheline (Pro-Banthine). Anticholinergic side effects include dry mouth, constipation, and urinary retention. The nurse needs to assess the client's medication list to determine whether the client is taking an anticholinergic medication.
You may also like to solve these questions
A nurse teaches a female client who has stress incontinence. Which statements should the nurse include in this client's teaching?
- A. When you start and stop your urine stream, you are using your pelvic muscles.
- B. Tighten your pelvic muscles for a slow count of 10 and then relax for a slow count of 10.
- C. Pelvic muscle exercises should only be performed sitting straight with your feet on the floor.
- D. After you have been using these exercises for a couple days, your control of urine will improve.
- E. Like any other muscle in your body, you can make your pelvic muscles stronger by contracting them.
Correct Answer: A,B,E
Rationale: The client should be taught that the muscles used to start and stop urination are pelvic muscles, and that pelvic muscles can be strengthened by contracting and relaxing them. The client should tighten pelvic muscles for a slow count of 10 and then relax the muscles for a slow count of 10 in various positions.
After delegating care to an unlicensed assistive personnel (UAP) for a client who is prescribed habit training to manage incontinence, a nurse evaluates the UAP's understanding. Which action indicates the UAP needs additional teaching?
- A. Toileting the client after breakfast
- B. Changing the client's incontinence brief when wet
- C. Encouraging the client to drink fluids
- D. Recording the client's incontinence episodes
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Habit training is undermined by the use of absorbent incontinence briefs or pads. The nurse should re-educate the UAP on the technique of habit training. The UAP should continue to toilet the client after meals, encourage the client to drink fluids, and record incontinence episodes.
A nurse cares for a client with urinary incontinence. The client states, 'I am so embarrassed. My bladder leaks like a young child's bladder.' How should the nurse respond?
- A. I understand how you feel. I would be mortified.
- B. Incontinence pads will minimize leaks in public.
- C. I can teach you strategies to help control your incontinence.
- D. More women experience incontinence than you might think.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The nurse should accept and acknowledge the client's concerns and assist the client to learn techniques that will help control urinary incontinence.
A nurse provides phone triage to a pregnant client. The client states, 'I am experiencing a burning pain when I urinate.' How should the nurse respond?
- A. This means labor will start soon. Prepare to go to the hospital.
- B. You probably have a urinary tract infection. Drink more cranberry juice.
- C. Make an appointment with your provider to have your infection treated.
- D. Your pelvic wall is weakening. Pelvic muscle exercises should help.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Pregnant clients with a urinary tract infection require prompt and aggressive treatment because cystitis can lead to acute pyelonephritis during pregnancy. The nurse should encourage the client to make an appointment and have the infection treated.
A nurse assesses clients on the medical-surgical unit. Which client is at greatest risk for the development of bacterial cystitis?
- A. A 36-year-old female who has never been pregnant
- B. A 42-year-old male who is prescribed cephalophamide
- C. A 34-year-old female who is not using estrogen replacement
- D. A 77-year-old male with mild congestive heart failure
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Females at any age are more susceptible to cystitis than men because of the shorter urethra in women. Postmenopausal women who are not on hormone replacement therapy are at increased risk for bacterial cystitis because of changes in the cells of the urethra and vagina. The middle-aged woman who has never been pregnant would not have a risk potential as high as the older woman who is not using hormone replacement therapy.
Nokea