Ringer's lactate is running at 125 mL/hr. The administration set has 15 drops/mL. What should the drip rate be?
- A. 8 drops/min
- B. 31 drops/min
- C. 50 drops/min
- D. 67 drops/min
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Divide 125 mL/hr by 60 min/hr and multiply by 15 drops/mL: (125 ÷ 60) × 15 = 31.25, rounded to 31 drops/min.
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An adult client is on call for the operating room. The preoperative medication order is for meperidine HCl (Demerol) 100 mg IM and atropine 0.4 mg IM. The operating room calls at 11:00 A.M. and requests that the client be medicated. The nurse notes that the client last received meperidine for pain at 10:00 A.M. What is the most appropriate action for the nurse to take?
- A. Give the preoperative medication as ordered
- B. Give half the dose of meperidine and all of the atropine
- C. Check with the anesthesiologist before administering the medication
- D. Withhold both the meperidine and the atropine
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Recent meperidine administration increases the risk of respiratory depression. Consulting the anesthesiologist ensures safe dosing.
The client is receiving a loop diuretic for congestive heart failure. Which medication would the nurse expect the client to be receiving while taking this medication?
- A. A potassium supplement.
- B. A cardiac glycoside.
- C. An ACE inhibitor.
- D. A potassium cation.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Loop diuretics like furosemide cause potassium loss; supplements prevent hypokalemia, a common need in CHF.
An adult client has pulmonary tuberculosis. He is receiving INH 300 mg PO, ethambutol 1 g PO daily, and streptomycin 1 g IM three times a week. When he comes in for a checkup, he tells the nurse that he hates getting shots and his ears ring most of the time. What advice does the nurse expect will be given to this client?
- A. Take pyridoxine daily.
- B. Expect red-colored urine and feces.
- C. Stop the medications when your cough is gone.
- D. Take streptomycin by mouth instead of by injection.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Streptomycin’s ototoxicity may require discontinuation, not pyridoxine (used for INH). Red urine/feces is expected with rifampin, not listed here, but monitoring is key.
The nurse has received the morning report and has the following medications due or being requested. In which order should the nurse administer the medications? List in order of priority.
- A. Administer furosemide (Lasix), a loop diuretic, IVP daily to a client diagnosed with heart failure who is dyspneic on exertion.
- B. Administer morphine, a narcotic analgesic, IVP prn to a client diagnosed with lower back pain who is complaining of pain at a '10' on a 1-to-10 scale.
- C. Administer neostigmine (Prostigmin), a cholinesterase inhibitor, PO to a client diagnosed with myasthenia gravis.
- D. Administer lidocaine, an antidysrhythmic, IVP prn to a client in normal sinus rhythm with multifocal premature ventricular contractions.
- E. Administer vancomycin, an aminoglycoside antibiotic, to a client diagnosed with a Staphylococcus infection who has a trough level of 14 mg/dL.
Correct Answer: B,D,A,C,E
Rationale: 1) Morphine for severe pain (acute, 10/10); 2) Lidocaine for PVCs (cardiac risk); 3) Furosemide for dyspnea (respiratory distress); 4) Neostigmine for myasthenia (muscle strength); 5) Vancomycin (infection, stable trough).
An elderly client is on an anticholinergic metered dose inhaler (MDI) for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The nurse would suggest a spacer to
- A. enhance the administration of the medication
- B. increase client compliance
- C. improve aerosol delivery in clients who are not able to coordinate the MDI
- D. prevent exacerbation of COPD
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Spacers improve the medication delivery in clients who are unable to coordinate the movements of administering a dose with an MDI.
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