Which of the following characteristics is true related to chronic illness?
- A. Abrupt onset
- B. Usually single cause
- C. Short latency period
- D. Noninfectious origin
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Chronic illness creeps noninfectious, multi-risk, long-brewing, lingering a nurse's map apart from acute's quick, single, catchy hits. It's a slow burn, not a spark, a health system staple.
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During his internship at a general practice, a medical student is asked to check the blood glucose level in a 30-year-old patient with type 1 diabetes. Acute glycaemic dysregulation is suspected in this patient. The patient asks if the student is going to take a capillary blood sample as shown in the picture below. Which of the following statements applies best in case of suspected acute dysregulation?
- A. The result will equal that of a finger prick sample
- B. The result will be higher than that of a finger prick sample
- C. The result will be lower than that of a finger prick sample
- D. One must not draw blood from this site in this case
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Acute type 1 chaos no arm vein draw, finger prick's king for fast reads, not this site. Nurses skip this, a chronic crisis dodge.
Risk factors for developing COPD include:
- A. Seasonal respiratory conditions and family history of emphysema
- B. Age, high fat diet and sedentary lifestyle
- C. History of cardiovascular and autoimmune conditions
- D. Indoor and outdoor air pollution
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: COPD risk factors center on chronic airway damage. Seasonal respiratory conditions may exacerbate, not cause, COPD, though family history of emphysema suggests genetic risk (e.g., alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency), but it's less primary than exposure. Age is a factor as lung function declines naturally, but high fat diet and sedentary lifestyle are more linked to obesity or cardiovascular disease, not directly COPD. Cardiovascular and autoimmune histories don't drive COPD etiology smoking and pollution do. Indoor (e.g., biomass smoke) and outdoor air pollution (e.g., particulates) are major irritants, causing inflammation and irreversible airflow limitation, per Deravin and Anderson (2019). Pollution's role is critical globally, especially in occupational or urban settings, outweighing secondary factors by directly triggering the chronic inflammatory cascade defining COPD pathogenesis.
The Lee Revised Cardiac Risk Index:
- A. Has been validated to predict the risk of mortality after major non-cardiac surgery.
- B. Is a complex algorithm.
- C. Provides a simple additive score incorporating six risk factors.
- D. Discriminates well between patients at moderate and severe risk of adverse cardiac outcome.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The Lee Revised Cardiac Risk Index (RCRI) predicts cardiac complications (e.g., myocardial infarction) after non-cardiac surgery. It's validated for morbidity, not mortality specifically, though it correlates with outcomes. It's not a complex algorithm but a straightforward tool: six factors (high-risk surgery, ischemic heart disease, heart failure, stroke/TIA, diabetes on insulin, renal insufficiency) are scored additively (0-6). This simplicity aids clinical use, providing risk percentages (e.g., 0.4% for 0 points, 11% for ≥3). It discriminates moderate-to-high risk well but less so at extremes. Age >70 isn't an automatic point; risk factors are specific. Its strength lies in its evidence-based, user-friendly design for perioperative cardiac risk stratification.
Essential education for patients with regards to insulin therapy includes the following except:
- A. Hypoglycaemia management
- B. Sickday management
- C. Prescribing insulin
- D. Safe driving
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Insulin education patients learn hypo fixes, sick day tweaks, driving rules, needle skills; prescribing's the doc's job, not their load. Nurses drill this chronic self-care kit, skipping the script-writing bit for pros.
A nurse is caring for a client who has heart failure and a prescription for digoxin. Which of the following statements by the client indicates an adverse effect of the medication?
- A. I've had a backache for several days
- B. I feel nauseated and have no appetite
- C. I can walk a mile a day
- D. I am urinating more frequently
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Digoxin's tightrope nausea and anorexia flag toxicity, a common adverse hit as levels climb, risking arrhythmias. Backache's vague, walking's a win, urination's unrelated. Nurses catch this, checking levels, a red light in this heart-boosting med's dance.