The child with CF is receiving albuterol. Which response should the nurse expect if albuterol is achieving the desired therapeutic effect?
- A. Increased heart rate
- B. Improved weight gain
- C. Fewer hospitalizations
- D. Fewer adventitious lung sounds
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: A: Albuterol may increase HR, but this is not the desired therapeutic effect. B: Weight should not be affected by albuterol. C: The use of a bronchodilator has not been demonstrated to decrease hospitalization frequency. D: The desired therapeutic effect of a bronchodilator such as albuterol (Proventil) is a reduction in adventitious (abnormal) breath sounds.
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The nurse is developing the plan of care for the 7-year-old with encopresis who has been started on lactulose. Which outcome would be most appropriate for the nurse to establish?
- A. 2-pound weight gain
- B. Nighttime continence
- C. Blood glucose 70-110 mg/dL
- D. Normal bowel movement daily
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: A: Weight gain is not expected with an osmotic laxative. B: Nighttime continence is not expected to be altered by an osmotic laxative. C: Blood glucose is not expected to be altered by an osmotic laxative. D: Lactulose (Constulose) is an osmotic laxative used in treating encopresis to prevent constipation; the nurse should establish an outcome of a normal daily bowel movement.
The nurse is reviewing the client's medication list illustrated, prepared by the client's daughter. The nurse is most concerned about which finding?
- A. Some medication doses are missing.
- B. Some administration routes are missing.
- C. Some medications are being duplicated.
- D. Some medications have drug-drug interactions.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: A: Missing doses of medication is important to address; however, duplicate medications should be addressed first. B: It is important to address the administration routes, but the duplication of medications is the priority to address. C: Hydrochlorothiazide + captopril (Capozide) is a combination product. The nurse should first determine if the client is taking the combination product along with the individual products due to the potential for overdosing. The client may be clear regarding the dose and the route but may not realize that two medications were replaced with one combination product. D: Drug-drug interactions are important to address and should be addressed, but the duplicate medications are the priority.
The client taking carbamazepine XR for seizure control reports that pieces of the medication are being passed into the stool. Which action by the nurse is most important?
- A. Report this to the health care provider.
- B. Reassure the client that this is normal.
- C. Collect the stool for laboratory analysis.
- D. Document the findings in the medical record.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: A: It is inappropriate to report an expected finding to the HCP. B: Carbamazepine XR (Tegretol XR) is a sustained-release medication with a coating that is not absorbed but is excreted in feces and may be visible in stool. The nurse should reassure the client that this is normal. C: Collecting the stool for laboratory analysis is not necessary because the coating is not absorbed but excreted in the stool. D: The nurse should document the client teaching but usually would not document the presence of the coating in the client's stool.
Which of the following are included in the Rights of Medication Administration? Select all that apply. A. right dose, B. right time, C. right explanation, D. right client, E. right route
- A. B, C, D, E
- B. A, B, D, E
- C. A, B, D
- D. B, C, E
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The Rights of Medication Administration include right client, right drug, right dose, right route, and right time. An additional right that is sometimes included is right documentation.
The nurse is preparing to administer the client's medication for treatment of TB. Which medication, if on the client's MAR, should the nurse plan to administer?
- A. Isoniazid
- B. Fluconazole
- C. Azithromycin
- D. Acyclovir
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: A: Isoniazid (INH) is an antimycobacterial medication affecting bacterial cell wall synthesis; it is used in the treatment of TB or other mycobacterial infections. B: Fluconazole (Diflucan) is an antifungal agent that inhibits synthesis of fungal sterols, a necessary component of the cell membrane. C: Azithromycin (Zithromax) is a macrolide antibiotic that is bacteriostatic against susceptible bacteria and is usually used for treating lower respiratory tract infections, skin infections, acute otitis media, tonsillitis, or Mycobacterium avium. D: Acyclovir (Zovirax) is an antiviral agent limited to treatment of herpes viruses.
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