When caring for a client with hypocalcaemia, the nurse should assess for:
- A. A decreased level of consciousness
- B. Tetany
- C. Bradycardia
- D. Respiratory depression
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Hypocalcemia can cause tetany (muscle spasms or twitching) due to increased neuromuscular excitability.
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A client hospitalized with mania is racing wildly about the unit trying to organize the other clients into a game of Ping-Pong. The nurse should:
- A. Send the client to the recreation room for art therapy.
- B. Take the client outside for a walk.
- C. Allow the client to continue because his activities are goal directed.
- D. Suggest that the client do exercises to a video instead.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Taking the client for a walk redirects energy safely and reduces stimulation. Art therapy may not engage, continuing the activity risks escalation, and video exercises lack supervision.
The nurse reinforces teaching to a client prescribed isoniazid, rifampin, ethambutol, and pyrazinamide to treat active tuberculosis. Which of the following instructions associated with the adverse effects of rifampin is most important for the nurse to include?
- A. Notify the health care provider if your urine is red
- B. Take acetaminophen every 6 hours for drug-associated joint pain while taking this medication
- C. Wear eyeglasses instead of soft contact lenses while taking this medication
- D. You can stop taking the medications as soon as one sputum culture comes back normal
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Rifampin can stain soft contact lenses orange-red, so wearing eyeglasses prevents this issue, making it a key instruction for adherence.
A 9 year-old is taken to the emergency room with right lower quadrant pain and vomiting. When preparing the child for an emergency appendectomy, what must the nurse expect to be the child's greatest fear?
- A. Change in body image
- B. An unfamiliar environment
- C. Perceived loss of control
- D. Guilt over being hospitalized
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: For school-age children, major fears are loss of control and separation from friends/peers.
A nurse is reinforcing appropriate interventions with the parent of an infant who had a febrile seizure. Which instruction is appropriate to review?
- A. Give acetaminophen or ibuprofen every 6-8 hours to control fever.
- B. Give the infant frequent tepid sponge baths to control the fever.
- C. If the infant develops another seizure, wait 15 minutes to see if it subsides.
- D. Place ice bags under the arms and around the neck to control fever.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Administering acetaminophen or ibuprofen every 6-8 hours helps control fever, reducing the risk of recurrent febrile seizures in infants.
Following a typanoplasty, the nurse should maintain the client in which position?
- A. Semi-Fowler's with the operative ear facing down
- B. Low Trendelenburg with the head in neutral position
- C. Flat with the head turned to the side with the operative ear facing up
- D. Supine with a small neck roll to allow for drainage
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: After tympanoplasty, the client should be positioned flat with the head turned to the side and the operative ear facing up to promote healing and prevent pressure on the surgical site. Answer A is incorrect because the operative ear should face up, not down. Answer B is incorrect because low Trendelenburg is not indicated. Answer D is incorrect because a neck roll may not ensure proper positioning of the operative ear.
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