Which is not true of secondary syphilis?
- A. it occurs 3-6 weeks after the primary stage
- B. it involves nonspecific symptoms eg, headache malaise
- C. there is lymphadenopathy
- D. there is a rash, which is pink plaques
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Secondary syphilis rash spreads, not just pink plaques; timing, malaise, nodes, tests fit. Nurses map this chronic bloom.
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In Netherlands, women who had pregnancy diabetes are advised to be tested regularly for diabetes. Question: This test is an example of which type of prevention?
- A. Universal prevention
- B. Selective prevention
- C. Indicated prevention
- D. Care-related prevention
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Post-gestational checks indicated, high-risk group, not all, some, or sick. Nurses track this, a chronic red flag watch.
The best way to prevent chronic complications of diabetes is to:
- A. Take medications as prescribed and remove sugar from the diet completely.
- B. Check feet daily for cuts, long toe nails and infections between the toes.
- C. Maintain a BGL that is as close to normal as possible.
- D. Undertake daily exercise to burn up the excess glucose in the system.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Preventing diabetes complications (e.g., neuropathy, retinopathy) hinges on glycemic control. Medications and sugar elimination help, but total sugar removal is impractical carbohydrates are broader, and control, not absence, matters. Daily foot checks prevent ulcers but address consequences, not root causes. Maintaining blood glucose levels (BGL) near normal (e.g., HbA1c <7%) via diet, exercise, and drugs prevents microvascular (kidney, eye) and macrovascular (heart) damage, per ADA guidelines. Exercise burns glucose, aiding control, but isn't singularly best' it's part of a triad. Tight BGL management reduces oxidative stress, glycation, and vascular injury, evidenced by trials (e.g., DCCT), making it the cornerstone strategy over isolated tactics, ensuring long-term organ protection.
The nurse knows that hemolytic to blood transfusions occur most often when the first milliliters of the infusion.
- A. 125
- B. 50
- C. 100
- D. 75
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Hemolytic reactions strike early 50 mL often triggers as mismatched blood clashes, a rapid antigen-antibody storm. Later volumes (75-125) build on it; 100's common but not peak. Nurses watch those first drops, stopping at 50 mL's hint of fever or pain, a tight window in this transfusion trap.
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is associated with:
- A. Skeletal muscle dysfunction.
- B. Mean pulmonary arterial pressure of ≥ 25 mm Hg.
- C. Significant reversibility in airflow limitation with bronchodilator therapy.
- D. Depression.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: COPD is a progressive lung disease characterized by airflow limitation that is not fully reversible. Skeletal muscle dysfunction is a well-documented extrapulmonary manifestation due to systemic inflammation, oxidative stress, and reduced physical activity, leading to muscle wasting and weakness. Elevated mean pulmonary arterial pressure (≥ 25 mm Hg) defines pulmonary hypertension, which can occur secondary to COPD but is not a universal feature. Significant reversibility in airflow limitation is more typical of asthma, not COPD, where bronchodilator response is limited. The FEVâ‚/FVC ratio in COPD is typically <0.7, not >0.7, making that option incorrect. Depression is common in COPD patients due to chronic illness and reduced quality of life, but it's not a defining feature. Among these, skeletal muscle dysfunction is most consistently associated with COPD pathophysiology, reflecting its systemic impact beyond the lungs.
The nurse is admitting an oncology patient to the unit prior to surgery. The nurse reads in the electronic health record that the patient has just finished radiation therapy. With knowledge of the consequent health risks, the nurse should prioritize assessments related to what health problem?
- A. Cognitive deficits
- B. Impaired wound healing
- C. Cardiac tamponade
- D. Tumor lysis syndrome
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Radiation pre-surgery zaps tissue impaired wound healing's the big risk, as it fries skin and vessels, slowing repair post-op. Cognitive deficits need brain radiation, not specified. Tamponade's rare, tied to chest radiation and fluid buildup. TLS hits post-chemo, not pre-surgery. Nurses in oncology lock onto skin checks and infection signs, knowing radiation's legacy can tank surgical outcomes if ignored.
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