The nurse is collaborating with the wound-ostomy-continence (WOC) nurse to teach a patient how to manage her new ileal conduit in the home setting. To prevent leakage or skin breakdown, the nurse should encourage which of the following practices?
- A. Empty the collection bag when it is between one-half and two-thirds full.
- B. Limit fluid intake to prevent production of large volumes of dilute urine.
- C. Reinforce the appliance with tape if small leaks are detected.
- D. Avoid using moisturizing soaps and body washes when cleaning the peristomal area.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: The patient is instructed to avoid moisturizing soaps and body washes when cleaning the area because they interfere with the adhesion of the pouch. To maintain skin integrity, a skin barrier or leaking pouch is never patched with tape to prevent accumulation of urine under the skin barrier or faceplate. Fluids should be encouraged, not limited, and the collection bag should not be allowed to become more than one-third full.
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The nurse who is leading a wellness workshop has been asked about actions to reduce the risk of bladder cancer. What health promotion action most directly addresses a major risk factor for bladder cancer?
- A. Smoking cessation
- B. Reduction of alcohol intake
- C. Maintenance of a diet high in vitamins and nutrients
- D. Vitamin D supplementation
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: People who smoke develop bladder cancer twice as often as those who do not smoke. High alcohol intake and low vitamin intake are not noted to contribute to bladder cancer.
The nurse is caring for a patient who underwent percutaneous lithotripsy earlier in the day. What instruction should the nurse give the patient?
- A. Limit oral fluid intake for 1 to 2 days.
- B. Report the presence of fine, sand like particles through the nephrostomy tube.
- C. Notify the physician about cloudy or foul-smelling urine.
- D. Report any pink-tinged urine within 24 hours after the procedure.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The patient should report the presence of foul-smelling or cloudy urine since this is suggestive of a UTI. Unless contraindicated, the patient should be instructed to drink large quantities of fluid each day to flush the kidneys. Sand like debris is normal due to residual stone products. Hematuria is common after lithotripsy.
A patient who has recently undergone ESWL for the treatment of renal calculi has phoned the urology unit where he was treated, telling the nurse that he has a temperature of101.1 \mathrm{~F}(38.4 \mathrm{C})$. How should the nurse best respond to the patient?
- A. Remind the patient that renal calculi have a noninfectious etiology and that a fever is unrelated to their recurrence.
- B. Remind the patient that occasional febrile episodes are expected following ESWL.
- C. Tell the patient to report to the ED for further assessment.
- D. Tell the patient to monitor his temperature for the next 24 hours and then contact his urologists office.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Following ESWL, the development of a fever is abnormal and is suggestive of a UTI; prompt medical assessment and treatment are warranted. It would be inappropriate to delay further treatment.
A nurse is caring for a female patient whose urinary retention has not responded to conservative treatment. When educating this patient about self-catheterization, the nurse should encourage what practice?
- A. Assuming a supine position for self-catheterization
- B. Using clean technique at home to catheterize
- C. Inserting the catheter 1 to 2 inches into the urethra
- D. Self-catheterizing every 2 hours at home
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The patient may use a clean (nonsterile) technique at home, where the risk of cross-contamination is reduced. The average daytime clean intermittent catheterization schedule is every 4 to 6 hours and just before bedtime. The female patient assumes a Fowlers position and uses a mirror to help locate the urinary meatus. The nurse teaches her to catheterize herself by inserting a catheter7.5 \mathrm{~cm}$ ( 3 inches) into the urethra, in a downward and backward direction.
A 52-year-old patient is scheduled to undergo ileal conduit surgery. When planning this patients discharge education, what is the most plausible nursing diagnosis that the nurse should address?
- A. Impaired mobility related to limitations posed by the ileal conduit
- B. Deficient knowledge related to care of the ileal conduit
- C. Risk for deficient fluid volume related to urinary diversion
- D. Risk for autonomic dysreflexia related to disruption of the sacral plexus
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The patient will most likely require extensive teaching about the care and maintenance of a new urinary diversion. A diversion does not create a serious risk of fluid volume deficit. Mobility is unlikely to be impaired after the immediate postsurgical recovery. The sacral plexus is not threatened by the creation of a urinary diversion.
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