Which of the following is the priority nursing intervention for a client experiencing a transfusion reaction?
- A. Stop transfusion immediately
- B. Check vital signs
- C. Notify the provider
- D. Flush the intravenous line
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Transfusion reactions hemolytic or allergic kill fast; stopping the infusion halts antigen flood, the priority per ABCs to save life. Vitals, notifying, or flushing follow stopping's first. Nurses act swift, cutting the culprit, a non-negotiable step in this blood-borne crisis, trumping all else.
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The spinothalamic and dorsal column sensation are examined as part of a neurological examination. One of the items belonging to dorsal column sensation is the sense of vibration, which is examined by means of a tuning fork. Question: What is the required frequency of this tuning fork?
- A. 512 Hz
- B. 256 Hz
- C. 128 Hz
- D. 64 Hz
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Vibration check 128 Hz hums right, dorsal column's sweet spot, not higher or lower. Nurses tune this, a chronic nerve test.
Which statement with respect to the disadvantages of insufficient physical activity is most correct?
- A. People are not so much concerned with the disadvantages, because these will only affect them in the long run
- B. The disadvantages can be compensated by moderate eating
- C. When explained, the disadvantages are enough to motivate people to change their behaviour
- D. The disadvantages result from inadequate behavioural control (self-efficacy)
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Inactivity's downsides long-term creep, folks shrug, not diet-fixed, rarely spur change, or just control flops. Nurses see this apathy, a chronic slow burn.
A 56 year old lady with Type 2 DM and a BMI of 30 kg/m2 is reviewed by her family doctor due to poor glycaemic control. She is treated with oral gliclazide since she is diagnosed as diabetic and currently she is on 160 mg bid. Her serum creatinine is 110 μmol/L. Which ONE of the following medications should be most appropriately to be added next?
- A. Metformin
- B. Acarbose
- C. Pioglitazone
- D. Insulin
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Gliclazide maxed, HbA1c off metformin's next, safe at creatinine 110 (eGFR likely 50+), tackling insulin resistance in obesity. Acarbose slows carbs, pioglitazone risks fluid, insulin's later, linagliptin's fine but less foundational. Nurses add this chronic sugar anchor, boosting control without kidney strain.
The New York Heart Association functional class has four grades and is used to assess severity of CHF and impact on QOL. Class III is described as:
- A. Slight impairment of physical activity: comfortable at rest but ordinary activity results in fatigue and palpitations
- B. Unable to carry out any physical activity without discomfort: symptoms of CHF are present even at rest with increased discomfort with any physical activity
- C. No limitation: ordinary physical activity does not cause undue fatigue, dyspnoea or palpitations
- D. Marked limitation of physical activity: comfortable at rest but less than ordinary activity results in symptoms
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: NYHA Class III big limits; rest's fine, but small moves spark symptoms, a QOL hit. Slight's I; none's 0; all-out's IV. Nurses gauge this, a chronic heart's midway bind.
Which of the following is NOT an example of intermittent fasting?
- A. Alternate day fasting
- B. Mediterranean dieting
- C. Modified fasting regimes such as the 5:2 diet'
- D. Time restricted feeding
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Fasting flips alternate, 5:2, timed, holy skips; Mediterranean's steady, not starved. Nurses clock this chronic fast gap.
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