The New York Heart Association functional class has four grades and is used to assess severity of CHF and impact on QOL. Class III is described as:
- A. Slight impairment of physical activity: comfortable at rest but ordinary activity results in fatigue and palpitations
- B. Unable to carry out any physical activity without discomfort: symptoms of CHF are present even at rest with increased discomfort with any physical activity
- C. No limitation: ordinary physical activity does not cause undue fatigue, dyspnoea or palpitations
- D. Marked limitation of physical activity: comfortable at rest but less than ordinary activity results in symptoms
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: NYHA Class III big limits; rest's fine, but small moves spark symptoms, a QOL hit. Slight's I; none's 0; all-out's IV. Nurses gauge this, a chronic heart's midway bind.
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The nurse is preparing an adolescent diagnosed with leukemia for a lumbar puncture. The nurse determines that the child understands the reason for the procedure when the child states that the procedure is done to:
- A. Make sure I don't have meningitis along with my cancer.
- B. Relieve some of the pressure on my brain.
- C. Remove the blood cancer cells so I don't have to have surgery.
- D. Check to see if the cancer has spread through my spinal cord and brain.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: A lumbar puncture (LP) in leukemia is performed to collect cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) to check for central nervous system (CNS) involvement cancer cells spreading to the spinal cord and brain a critical staging step that influences treatment, like intrathecal chemotherapy. The adolescent's statement about checking for spread reflects accurate understanding, essential for informed consent and reducing anxiety through clarity. Ruling out meningitis is a possible LP use, but in leukemia, CNS metastasis is the primary concern unless symptoms suggest infection. Relieving brain pressure applies to conditions like hydrocephalus, not leukemia's typical presentation. Removing cancer cells via LP isn't a treatment; it's diagnostic. The nurse's confirmation of this understanding ensures the child is prepared, aligning with pediatric oncology's emphasis on patient education and procedural readiness.
Which of the following is NOT an example of intermittent fasting?
- A. Alternate day fasting
- B. Mediterranean dieting
- C. Modified fasting regimes such as the 5:2 diet'
- D. Time restricted feeding
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Fasting flips alternate, 5:2, timed, holy skips; Mediterranean's steady, not starved. Nurses clock this chronic fast gap.
What is the relationship between hyperlipidaemia and non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH)?
- A. Hyperlipidaemia contributes to the development of NASH
- B. NASH contributes to the development of hyperlipidaemia
- C. There is no relationship between hyperlipidaemia and NASH
- D. Answers 1 and 2 are correct
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: NASH and hyperlipidaemia dance both ways high lipids pile fat, NASH pumps them back, a chronic loop. No split or null fits nurses track this lipid-liver ping-pong.
A 60-year-old patient with a diagnosis of prostate cancer is scheduled to have an interstitial implant for high-dose radiation (HDR). What safety measure should the nurse include in this patient's subsequent plan of care?
- A. Limit the time that visitors spend at the patient's bedside
- B. Teach the patient to perform all aspects of basic care independently
- C. Assign male nurses to the patient's care whenever possible
- D. Situate the patient in a shared room with other patients receiving brachytherapy
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: HDR implants (brachytherapy) emit radiation limiting visitor time (e.g., 30 min) cuts exposure risk. Self-care's nice but not safety-driven. Gender's irrelevant pregnant staff avoid, not males. Shared rooms up exposure, not safety. Nurses in oncology enforce this, shielding others while the source's active, a radiation rule of thumb.
The single most effective intervention to reduce the risk of developing COPD and stop its progression is
- A. Increased physical activity
- B. Prompt intervention for chest infection
- C. Smoking Cessation
- D. Avoidance of indoor and outdoor pollutants
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: COPD's king fix quit smoking slashes risk and stalls damage, trumping exercise, infection zaps, or pollution dodges. It's the top toxin, 80% of cases, a chronic killer nurses chase down hard.
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