The nurse is caring for a young adult female patient who is diagnosed with polycystic kidney disease. Which of the following information should the nurse include in teaching at this time?
- A. Importance of genetic counselling
- B. Complications of renal transplantation
- C. Methods for treating persistent and severe pain
- D. Differences between hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Because a young female patient may be considering having children, the nurse should include information about genetic counselling when teaching the patient. The well-managed patient will not need to choose between hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis or know about the effects of transplantation for many years. There is no indication that the patient has persistent pain.
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The nurse is caring for a patient following rectal surgery who voids about 50 mL of urine every 30-60 minutes. Which of the following nursing actions is best?
- A. Use a bladder scan device to check the postvoiding residual.
- B. Monitor the patient's intake and output over the next few hours.
- C. Have the patient take small amounts of fluid frequently throughout the day.
- D. Reassure the patient that this is normal after rectal surgery because of anesthesia.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: A bladder scan device can be used to check for residual urine after the patient voids. Because the patient's history and clinical manifestations are consistent with overflow incontinence, it is not appropriate to have the patient drink small amounts. Although overflow incontinence is not unusual after surgery, the nurse should intervene to correct the physiological problem, not just reassure the patient. The patient may develop reflux into the renal pelvis as well as discomfort from a full bladder if the nurse waits to address the problem for several hours.
The home health nurse is teaching a patient with a neurogenic bladder how to use intermittent catheterization for bladder emptying. Which of the following patient statements indicates that the teaching has been effective?
- A. I will use a sterile catheter and gloves for each time I self-catheterize.
- B. I will clean the catheter carefully before and after each catheterization.
- C. I will need to buy seven new catheters weekly and use a new one every day.
- D. I will need to take prophylactic antibiotics to prevent any urinary tract infections.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Patients who are at home can use a clean technique for intermittent self-catheterization and change the catheter every 7 days. There is no need to use a new catheter every day, to use sterile catheters, or to take prophylactic antibiotics.
The nurse is caring for a patient who had a nephrectomy after having massive trauma to the kidney. Which of the following assessment findings obtained postoperatively is most important to communicate to the surgeon?
- A. Blood pressure is 102/58.
- B. Incisional pain level is 8/10.
- C. Urine output is 20 ml/hour for 2 hours.
- D. Crackles are heard at both lung bases.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Because the urine output should be at least 0.5 ml/kg/hour, a 20 ml output for 2 hours indicates that the patient may have decreased renal perfusion because of bleeding, inadequate fluid intake, or obstruction at the suture site. The blood pressure requires ongoing monitoring but does not indicate inadequate perfusion at this time. The patient should cough and deep breathe, but the crackles do not indicate a need for an immediate change in therapy. The incisional pain should be addressed, but this is not as potentially life-threatening as decreased renal perfusion.
The nurse is assessing a male patient with symptoms of a feeling of incomplete bladder emptying and a split, spraying urine stream. Which of the following conditions should the nurse question the patient about when taking a health history?
- A. Bladder infection
- B. Recent kidney trauma
- C. Gonococcal urethritis
- D. Benign prostatic hyperplasia
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The patient's clinical manifestations are consistent with urethral strictures, a possible complication of gonococcal urethritis. These symptoms are not consistent with benign prostatic hyperplasia, kidney trauma, or bladder infection.
The nurse is caring for a patient who is two days postoperative with an ileal conduit, and the patient will not look at the stoma or participate in care and insists that no one but the ostomy nurse specialist care for the stoma. Which of the following nursing diagnoses best reflects the data that the nurse has obtained?
- A. Anxiety related to threat to current status (effects of procedure on lifestyle)
- B. Disturbed body image related to alteration in self-perception
- C. Ineffective coping related to insufficient sense of control
- D. Ineffective denial related to ineffective coping strategies (denial of altered body function)
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The patient's unwillingness to look at the stoma or participate in care indicates that disturbed body image is the best diagnosis. No data suggest that the impact on lifestyle is a concern for the patient, or that ineffective coping is a result of an insufficient sense of control. The patient's insistence that only the ostomy nurse care for the stoma indicates that denial is not present.
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