The home health nurse is visiting a client with Paget's disease. An important part of preventive care for the client with Paget's disease is:
- A. Keeping the environment free of clutter
- B. Advising the client to see the dentist regularly
- C. Encouraging the client to take the influenza vaccine
- D. Telling the client to take a daily multivitamin
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Paget's disease weakens bones, increasing fracture risk. A clutter-free environment prevents falls, a key preventive measure. Dental care, vaccines, and vitamins are less specific.
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A client with gallstones and obstructive jaundice is experiencing severe itching. The physician has prescribed cholestyramine (Questran). The client asks, “How does this drug work?” What is the nurse’s best response?
- A. “It blocks histamine, reducing the allergic response.”
- B. “It inhibits the enzyme responsible for bile excretion.”
- C. “It decreases the amount of bile in the gallbladder.”
- D. “It binds with bile acids and is excreted in bowel movements with stool.”
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Cholestyramine binds bile acids in the intestine, forming complexes excreted in stool, reducing circulating bile acids that cause itching. It doesn’t block histamine (A), inhibit enzymes (B), or reduce gallbladder bile (C).
Before administering intravenous chemotherapy to the patient being treated, the nurse should:
- A. Administer a bolus of IV fluid
- B. Administer pain medication
- C. Administer an antiemetic
- D. Allow the patient a chance to eat
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Chemotherapy often causes nausea and vomiting, so administering an antiemetic prophylactically is standard to improve patient comfort. Fluid boluses, pain medication, or eating are not routine pre-chemotherapy steps unless specified.
While the nurse is taking a male client's blood pressure, he makes flirtatious remarks to her. The nurse will handle this effectively if she:
- A. Politely tells the client, 'Keep your hands off'
- B. Ignores the remarks and hopes he will not try it again
- C. Confronts the remarks but attempts not to reject the client
- D. Leaves the room in order to compose herself
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: By confronting the remarks, she can recognize that his feelings of attraction may be normal but are not appropriate within the context of their nurse-client relationship.
A client has renal failure. Today's lab values indicate he has an elevated serum potassium. What additional priority information does the nurse need to obtain?
- A. Evaluation of his level of consciousness
- B. Evaluation of an electrocardiogram
- C. Measurement of his urine output for the past 8 hours
- D. Serum potassium lab values for the last several days
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The level of consciousness is not affected by elevated potassium levels. An electrocardiogram (EKG) can tell the nurse whether this client is experiencing any cardiac dysfunction or arrhythmias related to the elevated potassium level. Measurement of the urine output is not a priority nursing action at this time. The client's serum potassium values for the past several days may provide information about his renal function, but they are not a priority at this time.
The nurse discovers that a 78-year-old client who received hydralazine (Apresoline) 20 mg 45 minutes ago has a blood pressure of 70/40 mm Hg. The client has been on this dose of the medication for 3 years. Which of the following data is most likely significant in relation to the cause of the low blood pressure?
- A. Pedal pulses 11 (weak)
- B. Twenty-four-hour intake 1000 mL/day for past 2 days
- C. Serum potassium 3.3
- D. Pulse rate 150 bpm
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: (A, D) Decreased pulse volume and increased pulse rate are signs of an acute hypotensive episode. Inadequate fluid volume when taking vasodilators can result in a drop in blood pressure when vasodilation starts to physiologically occur as an action of the drug. A potassium level of 3.3 would not be associated with a significant drop in blood pressure.
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