When a patient diagnosed with schizophrenia was discharged 6 months ago, haloperidol was prescribed. The patient now says, 'I stopped taking those pills. I didn't like how it made me feel.' What likely side effects did the patient experience?
- A. Sedation and muscle stiffness
- B. Sweating, nausea, and diarrhea
- C. Mild fever, sore throat, and skin rash
- D. Headache, watery eyes, and runny nose
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Typical antipsychotic drugs often produce sedation and extrapyramidal side effects such as stiffness and gait disturbance. The side effects mentioned in the other options are usually not associated with typical antipsychotic therapy or would not have the effect described by the patient.
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An acutely violent patient diagnosed with schizophrenia receives several doses of haloperidol. Two hours later the nurse notices the patient's head rotated to one side in a stiffly fixed position; the lower jaw is thrust forward, and the patient is drooling. Which intervention by the nurse is indicated?
- A. Administer diphenhydramine 50 mg IM from the PRN medication administration record.
- B. Reassure the patient that the symptoms will subside. Practice relaxation exercises with the patient.
- C. Give trihexyphenidyl 5 mg orally at the next regularly scheduled medication administration time.
- D. Administer atropine sulfate 2 mg subcutaneously from the PRN medication administration record.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Diphenhydramine, trihexyphenidyl, benztropine, and other anticholinergic medications may be used to treat dystonias. Swallowing will be difficult or impossible; therefore, oral medication is not an option. Medication should be administered immediately; therefore, the intramuscular route is best. In this case, the best option given is diphenhydramine.
A newly admitted patient diagnosed with schizophrenia says, 'The voices are bothering me. They weigh They yell and tell me I'm bad. I have got to get away from them.' Select the nurse's most helpful reply.
- A. Do you hear the voices often?
- B. Do you have a plan for getting away from the voices?
- C. I will stay with you. Focus on what we are talking about, not the voices.
- D. Forget about the voices. Ask some other patients to sit and talk with you.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Staying with a distraught patient who is hearing voices serves several purposes: ongoing observation, the opportunity to provide reality orientation, a means of helping dismiss the voices, the opportunity of forestalling an action that would result in self-injury, and general support to reduce anxiety. Asking if the patient hears voices is not particularly relevant at this point. Asking if the patient plans to 'get away from the voices' is relevant for assessment purposes but is less helpful than offering to stay with the patient while encouraging a focus on their discussion. Asking other patients to talk incorrectly shifts responsibility for intervention from the nurse to other patients.
A patient diagnosed with schizophrenia is demonstration catatonia. The patient has little spontaneous movement and waxy flexibility. Which patient needs are of priority importance?
- A. Psychosocial
- B. Physiological
- C. Self-actualization
- D. Safety and security
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Physiological needs must be met to preserve life. A patient who is catatonic may need to be fed by hand or tube, toileted, and given range-of-motion exercises to preserve physiological integrity. The assessment findings do not suggest safety concerns. Higher-level needs (psychosocial and self-actualization) are of lesser concern.
A newly admitted patient diagnosed with schizophrenia is hypervigilant and constantly scans the environment. The patient states, 'I saw two doctors talking in the hall. They were plotting to kill me.' The nurse may correctly assess this as what classic behavior?
- A. Echolalia
- B. An idea of reference
- C. A delusion of infidelity
- D. An auditory hallucination
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Ideas of reference are misinterpretations of the verbalizations or actions of others that give special personal meanings to these behaviors; for example, when seeing two people talking, the individual assumes they are talking about him or her. The other terms do not correspond with the scenario.
A patient diagnosed with schizophrenia says, 'Everyone has skin lice that jump on you and contaminate your blood.' Which problem is evident?
- A. Poverty of content
- B. Concrete thinking
- C. Neologisms
- D. Paranoia
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: The patient's unrealistic fear of contamination indicates paranoia. Neologisms are invented words. Concrete thinking involves literal interpretation. Poverty of content refers to an inadequate fund of information.
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