An occupational health nurse is providing an educational event and has been asked by an administrative worker about the risk of varicose veins. What should the nurse suggest as a proactive preventative measure for varicose veins?
- A. Sit with crossed legs for a few minutes each hour to promote relaxation.
- B. Walk for several minutes every hour to promote circulation.
- C. Elevate the legs when tired.
- D. Wear snug-fitting ankle socks to decrease edema.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: A proactive approach to preventing varicose veins would be to walk for several minutes every hour to promote circulation. Sitting with crossed legs may promote relaxation, but it is contraindicated for patients with, or at risk for, varicose veins. Elevating the legs only helps blood passively return to the heart and does not help maintain the competency of the valves in the veins. Wearing tight ankle socks is contraindicated for patients with, or at risk for, varicose veins; socks that are below the muscles of the calf do not promote venous return, the socks simply capture the blood and promote venous stasis.
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A medical nurse has admitted four patients over the course of a 12-hour shift. For which patient would assessment of ankle-brachial index (ABI) be most clearly warranted?
- A. A patient who has peripheral edema secondary to chronic heart failure
- B. An older adult patient who has a diagnosis of unstable angina
- C. A patient with poorly controlled type 1 diabetes who is a smoker
- D. A patient who has community-acquired pneumonia and a history of COPD
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Nurses should perform a baseline ABI on any patient with decreased pulses or any patient 50 years of age or older with a history of diabetes or smoking. The other answers do not apply.
The nurse has performed a thorough nursing assessment of the care of a patient with chronic leg ulcers. The nurses assessment should include which of the following components?
- A. Location and type of pain
- B. Apical heart rate
- C. Bilateral comparison of peripheral pulses
- D. Comparison of temperature in the patients legs
- E. Identification of mobility limitations
Correct Answer: A,C,D,E
Rationale: A careful nursing history and assessment are important. The extent and type of pain are carefully assessed, as are the appearance and temperature of the skin of both legs. The quality of all peripheral pulses is assessed, and the pulses in both legs are compared. Any limitation of mobility and activity that results from vascular insufficiency is identified. Not likely is there any direct indication for assessment of apical heart rate, although peripheral pulses must be assessed.
You are caring for a patient who is diagnosed with Raynauds phenomenon. The nurse should plan interventions to address what nursing diagnosis?
- A. Chronic pain
- B. Ineffective tissue perfusion
- C. Impaired skin integrity
- D. Risk for injury
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Raynauds phenomenon is a form of intermittent arteriolar vasoconstriction resulting in inadequate tissue perfusion. This results in coldness, pain, and pallor of the fingertips or toes. Pain is typically intermittent and acute, not chronic, and skin integrity is rarely at risk. In most cases, the patient is not at a high risk for injury.
The nurse is caring for a patient who is admitted to the medical unit for the treatment of a venous ulcer in the area of her lateral malleolus that has been unresponsive to treatment. What is the nurse most likely to find during an assessment of this patients wound?
- A. Hemorrhage
- B. Heavy exudate
- C. Deep wound bed
- D. Pale-colored wound bed
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Venous ulcerations in the area of the medial or lateral malleolus (gaiter area) are typically large, superficial, and highly exudative. Venous hypertension causes extravasation of blood, which discolors the area of the wound bed. Bleeding is not normally present.
A patient comes to the walk-in clinic with complaints of pain in his foot following stepping on a roofing nail 4 days ago. The patient has a visible red streak running up his foot and ankle. What health problem should the nurse suspect?
- A. Cellulitis
- B. Local inflammation
- C. Elephantiasis
- D. Lymphangitis
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Lymphangitis is an acute inflammation of the lymphatic channels. It arises most commonly from a focus of infection in an extremity. Usually, the infectious organism is hemolytic streptococcus. The characteristic red streaks that extend up the arm or the leg from an infected wound outline the course of the lymphatic vessels as they drain. Cellulitis is caused by bacteria, which cause a generalized edema in the subcutaneous tissues surrounding the affected area. Local inflammation would not present with red streaks in the lymphatic channels. Elephantiasis is transmitted by mosquitoes that carry parasitic worm larvae; the parasites obstruct the lymphatic channels and results in gross enlargement of the limbs.
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