When educating a female client on the signs and symptoms of myocardial infarction, the nurse recognizes which of the following should be included in the teaching?
- A. Pain usually resolves with rest and relaxation
- B. Older adults and women often present with atypical signs and symptoms
- C. Women experience intermittent claudication
- D. Substernal chest pain is the most common symptom in women
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: MI in women skews odd fatigue, nausea, not just chest pain, hit older females especially, a teaching must as atypical signs delay care. Rest eases angina, not MI. Claudication's PAD, not heart. Substernal pain's common, less so in women. Nurses stress this quirk, boosting recognition in this sneaky killer.
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The definition of Chronic Heart Failure is:
- A. Failure of the heart to adequately pump blood to the body
- B. Long-term inability of the heart to meet metabolic demands required to maintain homeostasis
- C. Prolonged enlargement of the left ventricle impacting on the contractility of the muscle
- D. Long term fluid build-up, causing increase in blood volume and reducing the ability of the heart to maintain blood flow
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Chronic heart failure's essence long-term pump lag can't match body's metabolic needs, a homeostasis bust. Simple pump fail's vague; LV growth or fluid traps are bits, not the whole. Nurses grasp this, a chronic ticker's root.
A nurse is caring for a client who has recently diagnosed with left ventricular heart failure. What is an early sign the client is most likely to report?
- A. Dyspnea on exertion
- B. Abdominal distention
- C. Swollen legs
- D. Weight gain
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Left ventricular failure backs blood into lungs dyspnea on exertion hits early as fluid seeps, taxing breathing during activity, a telltale sign before systemic effects. Abdominal distention or leg swelling marks right-sided or late failure. Weight gain tracks fluid, not initial. Nurses catch dyspnea, educating clients to report it, key to early management in this progressive pump failure.
Which of the following patients would probably not benefit from a >5-10% weight loss?
- A. A 28-year-old female with BMI 37 kg/m² and oligomenorrhea but planning for fertility in the future
- B. A 40-year-old man with BMI 26 kg/m², who has a strong family history of diabetes, recently diagnosed with prediabetes
- C. A 21-year-old man with BMI 42 kg/m² with no known medical problems and a family history of T2DM
- D. A 70-year-old female, BMI 26 kg/m², with well-controlled T2DM on two oral anti-diabetic medications and osteoporosis
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: A 5-10% weight loss benefits most with obesity-related conditions improving fertility (BMI 37), prediabetes (BMI 26), or T2DM risk (BMI 42). The 70-year-old with BMI 26, well-controlled T2DM, and osteoporosis may not benefit significantly; weight loss could worsen bone density, and her diabetes is managed, reducing urgency. Her age and comorbidities shift focus to stability, not weight reduction, guiding physicians in chronic care prioritization.
Glycaemic profiles of people with diabetes varies with all EXCEPT:
- A. Diet
- B. Exercise
- C. Stress
- D. Monitoring of blood glucose
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Sugar swings food, sweat, drugs, checks shift it; dress' is a typo for stress, but stress fits, not fabric. Nurses track this chronic dance, not wardrobe.
Which of the following models view disability as directly caused by disease or trauma?
- A. Social
- B. Nursing
- C. Medical
- D. Collaborative
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The medical model pins disability on disease or injury fix the body, fix the problem a view nurses use for acute hits. Social blames society's gaps; nursing, collaborative blend care angles, not cause. It's a chronic lens shift, body-first.