While caring for a client who has just come from surgery and is in the recovery room with an endotracheal tube in place, the nurse deflates the cuff on the tube and removes it. The client sits up in bed, grasps his throat, and begins to make wheezing sounds. Which of the following conditions is the most likely cause of this situation?
- A. The client is choking on part of the tube
- B. The client has anxiety
- C. The client is having a laryngospasm
- D. The client is having a normal response from anesthesia
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: After surgery, some clients may experience a laryngospasm during emergence from anesthesia. A laryngospasm can lead to the closure of the laryngeal opening due to spasm of the vocal cords. In this scenario, the client's symptoms of wheezing and throat grasping are indicative of a laryngospasm rather than choking on the tube, anxiety, or a normal response from anesthesia. The nurse should act promptly to open the airway to aid breathing and consider administering muscle relaxants as necessary.
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The nurse is performing an assessment on a 3-year-old child with chickenpox. The child's mother tells the nurse that the child keeps scratching at night, and the nurse teaches the mother about measures that will prevent an alteration in skin integrity. Which statement by the mother indicates that teaching was effective?
- A. I need to place white gloves on my child's hands at night.
- B. I will apply generous amounts of a cortisone cream to prevent itching.
- C. I will give my child a glass of warm milk at bedtime to help my child sleep.
- D. I need to keep my child in a warm room at night so that the covers will not cause my child to scratch.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Placing white gloves on the child's hands at night prevents scratching during sleep, which helps maintain skin integrity and reduces the risk of secondary infections. Applying cortisone cream is not recommended without a prescription, as it may not be appropriate for chickenpox and could increase the risk of complications. Warm milk may help with sleep but does not directly address scratching or skin integrity. Keeping the child in a warm room does not prevent scratching and may increase discomfort, as cooler environments are often better for reducing itching.
The nurse has given instructions to the client diagnosed with chronic kidney disease about reducing pruritus from uremia. The nurse determines that the client needs further teaching if the client states the intention to use which item for skin care?
- A. Mild soap
- B. Oil in the bath water
- C. Lanolin-based lotion
- D. Alcohol cleansing pads
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Alcohol cleansing pads increase skin dryness and pruritus in chronic kidney disease clients with uremia. Mild soap, bath oils, and lanolin-based lotions help reduce dryness and irritation without exacerbating symptoms.
A client with a history of depression will be participating in cognitive therapy for health maintenance. The client asks the nurse, 'How does this treatment work?' Which statement is most appropriate for the nurse to make to the client?
- A. This treatment helps you relax and develop new coping skills.'
- B. This treatment helps you confront your fears by gradually exposing you to them.'
- C. This treatment helps you examine how your past life has contributed to your problems.'
- D. This treatment helps examine how your thoughts and feelings contribute to your difficulties.'
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Cognitive therapy is frequently used with clients who have depression. This type of therapy is based on exploring the client's personal experience. It includes examining the client's thoughts and feelings about situations and how these thoughts and feelings contribute to and perpetuate the client's difficulties and mood. The development of new coping skills, gradually confronting fears, and reviewing one's past life in relation to your current problems are not characteristics of cognitive therapy.
A client diagnosed with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) gets recurrent Candida infections of the mouth (thrush). The nurse has given the client instructions to minimize the occurrence of thrush and determines that the client understands the instructions if which statement is made by the client?
- A. I should use a mouthwash at least once a week.
- B. I should use warm saline or water to rinse my mouth.
- C. I should brush my teeth and rinse my mouth once a day.
- D. Increasing the amount of red meat in my diet will keep this from recurring.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: To minimize the occurrence of oral thrush in a client with AIDS, maintaining good oral hygiene is essential. Rinsing the mouth with warm saline or water helps keep the oral cavity clean and reduces the risk of Candida overgrowth. Using mouthwash once a week is insufficient, and brushing only once a day does not provide adequate oral hygiene. Increasing red meat intake does not directly affect thrush prevention, as dietary changes unrelated to sugar or carbohydrate reduction have little impact on Candida infections.
When a blood pressure cuff is too wide for a client's arm, what type of reading might this blood pressure cuff produce?
- A. A normal reading
- B. An abnormally low reading
- C. An abnormally high reading
- D. A fluctuating reading
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: When a blood pressure cuff is too wide for a client's arm, it may produce an abnormally low blood pressure reading. This occurs because the oversized cuff can lead to an underestimation of blood pressure. It is essential to ensure that the cuff fits appropriately to obtain an accurate reading. An abnormally high reading (Choice C) is less likely with an oversized cuff, as it generally leads to lower readings. A normal reading (Choice A) is unlikely due to the inaccuracies caused by the oversized cuff. A fluctuating reading (Choice D) is not a typical result of using a cuff that is too wide; instead, it usually leads to consistently low readings.
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