The nurse assesses the client diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia. Which finding should be the nurse’s priority for implementing interventions?
- A. Pain from mucositis and oral tissue injury
- B. Weakness and fatigue with slight activity
- C. T 99°F, P 100, R 22, BP 132/64 mm Hg
- D. Ecchymosis and petechiae noted on arms
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: A. Pain control is priority. The altered VS (other than temperature) could be related to pain. B. Weakness and fatigue are due to anemia and also the disease process. It is important to allow rest, but if pain is not controlled the client may not be able to rest. C. The temperature warrants further monitoring because it could indicate a developing infection; the other VS may decrease if pain is controlled. D. Ecchymosis and petechiae are associated with low platelet counts. The nurse should check the laboratory report for the platelet level, but this is an assessment and not an intervention.
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The client with O+ blood is in need of an emergency transfusion but the laboratory does not have any O+ blood available. Which potential unit of blood could be given to the client?
- A. The O- unit.
- B. The A+ unit.
- C. The B+ unit.
- D. Any Rh+ unit.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: O- is the universal donor (A), safe for O+ clients. A+ (B), B+ (C), and other Rh+ (D) risk reactions due to antigens.
Which clinical manifestation of Stage I non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma would the nurse expect to find when assessing the client?
- A. Enlarged lymph tissue anywhere in the body.
- B. Tender left upper quadrant.
- C. No symptom in this stage.
- D. Elevated B-cell lymphocytes on the CBC.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Stage I NHL is often asymptomatic (C), with localized node involvement. Enlarged nodes (A) are later, LUQ tenderness (B) suggests spleen, and B-cell elevation (D) is lab-based, not clinical.
The client diagnosed with leukemia is scheduled for bone marrow transplantation. Which interventions should be implemented to prepare the client for this procedure? Select all that apply.
- A. Administer high-dose chemotherapy.
- B. Teach the client about autologous transfusions.
- C. Have the family members' HLA typed.
- D. Monitor the complete blood cell count daily.
- E. Provide central line care per protocol.
Correct Answer: A,C,D,E
Rationale: High-dose chemotherapy (A) ablates marrow, HLA typing (C) identifies donors, CBC monitoring (D) tracks counts, and central line care (E) prevents infection. Autologous transfusions (B) are irrelevant (donor marrow used).
The nurse assesses that the client with hemolytic anemia has weakness, fatigue, malaise, and skin and mucous membrane pallor. Which finding should the nurse also associate with hemolytic anemia?
- A. Scleral jaundice
- B. A smooth, red tongue
- C. A craving for ice to chew
- D. A poor intake of fresh vegetables
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: A. Jaundice occurs in hemolytic anemia from the shortened life span of the RBC and the breakdown of Hgb. About 80% of heme is converted to bilirubin, conjugated in the liver, and excreted in the bile. The increased bilirubin in the blood causes the jaundice. B. A smooth, red tongue is seen with iron-deficiency anemia. C. A craving for ice is seen with iron-deficiency anemia. D. Folate deficiency occurs in people who rarely eat fresh vegetables.
A client who receives a diagnosis of pernicious anemia asks why she must receive vitamin shots. What is the best answer for the nurse to give?
- A. Shots work faster than pills.'
- B. Your body cannot absorb vitamin B12 from foods.'
- C. Vitamins are necessary to make the blood cells.'
- D. You can get more vitamins in a shot than a pill.'
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: In pernicious anemia, the lack of intrinsic factor prevents absorption of vitamin B12 from foods, necessitating injections.