The nurse is admitting a patient to the medicalsurgical unit from the PACU. What should the nurse do to help the patient clear secretions and help prevent pneumonia?
- A. Encourage the patient to eat a balanced diet that is high in protein
- B. Encourage the patient to limit his activity for the first 72 hours
- C. Encourage the patient to take his medications as ordered
- D. Encourage the patient to use the incentive spirometer every 2 hours
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: To clear secretions and prevent pneumonia, the nurse encourages the patient to turn frequently, take deep breaths, cough, and use the incentive spirometer at least every 2 hours. These pulmonary exercises should begin as soon as the patient arrives on the clinical unit and continue until the patient is discharged. A balanced, high protein diet; visiting family in the waiting room; or taking medications as ordered would not help to clear secretions or prevent pneumonia.
You may also like to solve these questions
The nurse is caring for a 78-year-old man who has had an outpatient cholecystectomy. The nurse is getting him up for his first walk postoperatively. To decrease the potential for orthostatic hypotension and consequent falls, what should the nurse have the patient do?
- A. Sit in a chair for 10 minutes prior to ambulating
- B. Drink plenty of fluids to increase circulating blood volume
- C. Stand upright for 2 to 3 minutes prior to ambulating
- D. Perform range-of-motion exercises for each joint
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Older adults are at an increased risk for orthostatic hypotension secondary to age-related changes in vascular tone. The patient should sit up and then stand for 2 to 3 minutes before ambulating to alleviate orthostatic hypotension. The nurse should assess the patients ability to mobilize safely, but full assessment of range of motion in all joints is not normally necessary. Sitting in a chair and increasing fluid intake are insufficient to prevent orthostatic hypotension and consequent falls.
The intraoperative nurse is transferring a patient from the OR to the PACU after replacement of the right knee. The patient is a 73-year-old woman. The nurse should prioritize which of the following actions?
- A. Keeping the patient sterile
- B. Keeping the patient restrained
- C. Keeping the patient warm
- D. Keeping the patient hydrated
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Special attention is given to keeping the patient warm because elderly patients are more susceptible to hypothermia. It is all important for the nurse to pay attention to hydration, but hypovolemia does not occur as quickly as hypothermia. The patient is never sterile and restraints are very rarely necessary.
The home health nurse is caring for a postoperative patient who was discharged home on day 2 after surgery. The nurse is performing the initial visit on the patients postoperative day 2. During the visit, the nurse will assess for wound infection. For most patients, what is the earliest postoperative day that a wound infection becomes evident?
- A. Day 9
- B. Day 7
- C. Day 5
- D. Day 3
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Wound infection may not be evident until at least postoperative day 5. This makes the other options incorrect.
The nurse admits a patient to the PACU with a blood pressure of 132/90 mm Hg and a pulse of 68 beats per minute. After 30 minutes, the patients blood pressure is 94/47 mm Hg, and the pulse is 110. The nurse documents that the patients skin is cold, moist, and pale. Of what is the patient showing signs?
- A. Hypothermia
- B. Hypovolemic shock
- C. Neurogenic shock
- D. Malignant hyperthermia
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The patient is exhibiting symptoms of hypovolemic shock; therefore, the nurse should notify the patients physician and anticipate orders for fluid and/or blood product replacement. Neurogenic shock does not normally result in tachycardia and malignant hyperthermia would not present at this stage in the operative experience. Hypothermia does not cause hypotension and tachycardia.
The nurse is discharging a patient home from an outpatient surgery center. The nurse has reviewed all of the discharge instructions with the patient and her caregiver. What else should the nurse do before discharging the patient from the facility? Select all that apply.
- A. Provide all discharge instructions in writing
- B. Provide the nurses or surgeons contact information
- C. Give prescriptions to the patient
- D. Irrigate the patients incision and perform a sterile dressing change
- E. Administer a bolus dose of an opioid analgesic
Correct Answer: A,B,C
Rationale: Before discharging the patient, the nurse provides written instructions, prescriptions and the nurses or surgeons telephone number. Administration of an opioid would necessitate further monitoring to ensure safety. A dressing change would not normally be ordered on the day of surgery.
Nokea