The nurse is caring for a client diagnosed with bronchiectasis. Which is a primary nursing intervention in caring for this client?
- A. Postural drainage
- B. Droplet precautions
- C. Preventative antibiotic use
- D. Administration of antitussives
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Management of bronchiectasis focuses on postural drainage and the movement of secretions out of the dilated sacs of the bronchioles. Bronchiectasis is not contagious or spread through droplets. The presence of infection is treated with selective antibiotics, but long-term preventative treatment with antibiotics is not protocol. Suppressing the cough mechanism with use of antitussives would be counterproductive in the management of bronchiectasis.
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The nurse identifies which finding to be most consistent prior to the onset of acute respiratory failure?
- A. Normal lung function
- B. Loss of lung function
- C. Chronic lung disease
- D. Slow onset of symptoms
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Acute respiratory failure occurs suddenly in clients who previously had normal lung function.
A client is admitted to the emergency department with a stab wound and is now presenting dyspnea, tachypnea, and sucking noise heard on inspiration and expiration. The nurse should care for the wound in which manner?
- A. Clean the wound and leave open to the air
- B. Apply vented dressing
- C. Apply airtight dressing
- D. Apply direct pressure to the wound
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The client has developed a pneumothorax, and the best action is to prevent further deflation of the affected lung by placing an airtight dressing over the wound. A vented dressing would be used in a tension pneumothorax, but because air is heard moving in and out, a tension pneumothorax is not indicated. Applying direct pressure is required if active bleeding is noted.
The nurse is obtaining data from a client with a respiratory disorder. Which information would be considered a part of the functional assessment and would assist in the diagnosis of an occupational lung disease?
- A. Cough and dyspnea
- B. Black-streaked sputum
- C. Tenacious secretions
- D. Barrel chest
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: A functional assessment provides data on the lifestyle, living environment, and work environment of the client, which can contribute to lung disorders. A black-tinged sputum is suggestive of prolonged exposure to coal dust. Cough, dyspnea, and tenacious secretions are vague respiratory symptoms that are not specific to occupational lung disease. The presence of barrel chest is indicative of trapped oxygen in the lungs over a prolonged period of time.
What is the reason for chest tubes after thoracic surgery?
- A. Draining secretions, air, and blood from the thoracic cavity
- B. Allowing air into the pleural space
- C. Indicating when the lungs have re-expanded by ceasing to bubble
- D. Draining secretions and blood while allowing air to remain in the thoracic cavity
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: After thoracic surgery, draining secretions, air, and blood from the thoracic cavity is necessary to allow the lungs to expand. Allowing air into the pleural space, indicating when lungs have re-expanded, and draining secretions and blood while air remains in the thoracic cavity are not the reasons for chest tubes after thoracic surgery.
The nurse knows the mortality rate is high in lung cancer clients due to which factor?
- A. Increase in women smokers
- B. Increased incidence among the elderly
- C. Increased exposure to industrial pollutants
- D. Few early symptoms
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Because lung cancer produces few early symptoms, its mortality rate is high. Lung cancer has increased in incidence due to an increase in the number of women smokers, a growing aging population, and exposure to pollutants but these are not directly related to the incidence of mortality rates.
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