Assessment of a pregnant woman and her fetus reveals tachycardia and hypertension. There is also evidence suggesting vasoconstriction. The nurse would question the woman about use of which substance?
- A. Marijuana
- B. Cocaine
- C. Nicotine
- D. Caffeine
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Cocaine causes tachycardia, hypertension, and vasoconstriction, risking placental abruption and fetal distress. Marijuana causes relaxation, nicotine raises heart rate but vasodilates, and caffeine mildly stimulates but doesn't constrict vessels.
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A client who is 4 months pregnant is at the prenatal clinic for her initial visit. Her history reveals she has 7-year-old twins who were born at 34 weeks gestation, a 2-year-old son born at 39 weeks gestation, and a spontaneous abortion 1 year ago at 6 weeks gestation. Using the GTPAL method, the nurse would document her obstetric history as:
- A. 3-2-1-0-3
- B. 4-1-1-1-3
- C. 4-2-1-3-1
- D. 3-1-2-2-3
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: GTPAL: Gravida (4 pregnancies: twins, son, abortion, current), Term (1 at 39 weeks), Preterm (1 at 34 weeks), Abortions (1 at 6 weeks), Living (3 children). Thus, 4-1-1-1-3 is correct. Other options miscalculate pregnancies, preterm births, or living children.
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.
A pregnant woman undergoes a triple/quadruple screen at 16 to 18 weeks' gestation. What would the nurse suspect if the woman's alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) level is decreased?
- A. Sickle-cell anemia
- B. Cardiac defects
- C. Down syndrome
- D. Respiratory disorders
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Low AFP suggests Down syndrome, often with altered hCG and estriol. Sickle-cell anemia uses other tests, cardiac defects may raise AFP, and respiratory issues don't typically affect AFP levels.
Assessment of a pregnant woman reveals a pigmented line down the middle of her abdomen. The nurse documents this as which finding?
- A. striae gravidarum
- B. linea nigra
- C. vascular spiders
- D. melasma
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Linea nigra is a dark line from umbilicus to pubis caused by increased melanin from hormonal changes. Striae gravidarum are stretch marks, vascular spiders are dilated vessels on face or chest, and melasma is facial pigmentation, none matching the abdominal line description.
A woman hospitalized with severe preeclampsia is being treated with hydralazine to control blood pressure. Which finding would lead the nurse to suspect that the client is having an adverse effect associated with this drug?
- A. Gastrointestinal bleeding
- B. Sweating
- C. Tachycardia
- D. Blurred vision
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Hydralazine, a vasodilator, can cause reflex tachycardia as blood pressure drops, increasing cardiac strain. Gastrointestinal bleeding, sweating, and blurred vision (a preeclampsia symptom) are not typical adverse effects.