In which ethnic group are people over 35 years advised to have their blood glucose levels checked because of the risk of type 2 diabetes?
- A. Creoles
- B. Hindu
- C. Moroccans
- D. Turks
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Hindus over 35 South Asian risk rockets type 2, outpacing others' odds. Nurses screen this, a chronic ethnic flag.
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During his internship at a general practice, a medical student is asked to check the blood glucose level in a 50-year-old patient with type 2 diabetes. The measurement is performed at a random moment and the carbohydrate intake has not been standardised before the measurement is taken. The result of the measurement is shown below. The general practitioner (GP) asks the student to report the result using standard medical terminology. Question: Which diagnosis is most consistent with the findings provided above?
- A. Hyperglycaemia
- B. Hypoglycaemia
- C. Hyperglycaemia with hyperosmolar state
- D. Normoglycaemia (euglycaemia)
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Random high glucose in type 2 hyperglycaemia, no hypo, osmolar crash, or norm. Nurses call this, a chronic sugar spike.
For a patient with osteogenic sarcoma, you would be particularly vigilant for elevations in which laboratory value?
- A. Sodium
- B. Calcium
- C. Potassium
- D. Hematocrit
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Osteogenic sarcoma, a bone cancer, often triggers hypercalcemia bone destruction releases calcium into blood, risking arrhythmias or kidney damage, a life-threatening shift demanding close watch. Sodium and potassium imbalances aren't bone-specific, more tied to general metabolism or treatment side effects. Hematocrit reflects anemia, common in cancer but not osteogenic sarcoma's hallmark. Calcium's spike, linked to osteolysis, makes it the nurse's focus elevations signal tumor activity or progression, prompting urgent interventions like fluids or bisphosphonates, a vigilance rooted in this cancer's skeletal impact and metabolic havoc.
Postoperative care at the completion of bimaxillary surgery:
- A. Is likely to be complicated by the presence of intermaxillary fixation (IMF).
- B. Involves awake rather than asleep extubation.
- C. Requires gentle removal of the tracheal tube to avoid damage of mandibular plates and screws.
- D. Involves reinsertion of a nasal tracheal tube when complicated by airway bleeding or obstruction requiring emergency reintubation.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Bimaxillary surgery's postoperative phase is complex. Intermaxillary fixation (IMF) aligns jaws but restricts mouth opening, complicating airway management, vomiting, and oral care raising aspiration or obstruction risks. Awake extubation is preferred, ensuring airway reflexes return, critical with IMF and swelling. Gentle tube removal prevents surgical site trauma (e.g., plates), though mandibular hardware is internal, less tube-accessible. Emergency reintubation may use nasal routes due to IMF, addressing bleeding/obstruction. HDU care is case-specific, not mandatory. IMF's presence drives tailored strategies, prioritizing airway security and patient stability in this high-risk recovery period.
Which of the following is NOT associated with obesity?
- A. Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
- B. Obstructive Sleep Apnea
- C. Increased mortality
- D. Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Obesity piles on NAFLD, apnea, death risk, back ache; type 1's autoimmune, not fat-driven. Nurses link this chronic weight web, not islet crash.
When assignments are being made for clients with alterations related to gastrointestinal (GI) cancer, which client would be the most appropriate to delegate to an LPN/LVN?
- A. A client with severe anemia secondary to GI bleeding
- B. A client who needs enemas and antibiotics to control GI bacteria
- C. A client who needs preoperative teaching for bowel resection surgery
- D. A client who needs central line insertion for chemotherapy
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Delegating in GI cancer care hinges on scope LPN/LVNs handle routine tasks like administering enemas and antibiotics, a straightforward intervention to curb bacteria, fitting their training under RN oversight. Severe anemia from bleeding demands RN assessment for stability or transfusion, beyond LPN scope. Preoperative teaching requires detailed education and evaluation, an RN's domain. Central line insertion involves advanced skills and risks, reserved for RNs or specialists. Enemas and antibiotics align with LPN/LVN capabilities, optimizing team roles while keeping complex care with RNs, a practical choice in managing GI cancer's multifaceted needs safely and efficiently.
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