You are caring for a patient with sickle cell disease in her home. Over the years, there has been joint damage, and the patient is in chronic pain. The patient has developed a tolerance to her usual pain medication. When does the tolerance to pain medication become the most significant problem?
- A. When it results in inadequate relief from pain
- B. When dealing with withdrawal symptoms resulting from the tolerance
- C. When having to report the patients addiction to her physician
- D. When the family becomes concerned about increasing dosage
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Tolerance to opioids is common and becomes a problem primarily in terms of maintaining adequate pain control. Symptoms of physical dependence may occur when opiates are discontinued, but there is no indication that the patients medication will be discontinued. This patient does not have an addiction and the familys concerns are secondary to those of the patient.
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You have just received report on a 27-year-old woman who is coming to your unit from the emergency department with a torn meniscus. You review her PRN medications and see that she has an NSAID (ibuprofen) ordered every 6 hours. If you wanted to implement preventive pain measures when the patient arrives to your unit, what would you do?
- A. Use a pain scale to assess the patients pain, and let the patient know ibuprofen is available every 6 hours if she needs it.
- B. Do a complete assessment, and give pain medication based on the patients report of pain.
- C. Check for allergies, use a pain scale to assess the patients pain, and offer the ibuprofen every 6 hours until the patient is discharged.
- D. Provide medication as per patient request and offer relaxation techniques to promote comfort.
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: One way preventive pain measures can be implemented is by using PRN medications on a more regular or scheduled basis to allow for more uniform pain control. Smaller drug doses of medication are needed with the preventive pain method when PRN medications are given around the clock. Offering the medication is more beneficial than letting the patient know ibuprofen is available.
A 60-year-old patient who has diabetes had a below-knee amputation 1 week ago. The patient asks why does it still feel like my leg is attached, and why does it still hurt? The nurse explains neuropathic pain in terms that are accessible to the patient. The nurse should describe what pathophysiologic process?
- A. The proliferation of nociceptors during times of stress
- B. Age-related deterioration of the central nervous system
- C. Psychosocial dependence on pain medications
- D. The abnormal reorganization of the nervous system
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: At any point from the periphery to the CNS, the potential exists for the development of neuropathic pain. Hyperexcitable nerve endings in the periphery can become damaged, leading to abnormal reorganization of the nervous system called neuroplasticity, an underlying mechanism of some neuropathic pain states. Neuropathic pain is not a result of age-related changes, nociceptor proliferation, or dependence on medications.
The mother of a cancer patient comes to the nurse concerned with her daughters safety. She states that her daughters morphine dose that she needs to control her pain is getting higher and higher. As a result, the mother is afraid that her daughter will overdose. The nurse educates the mother about what aspect of her pain management?
- A. The dose range is higher with cancer patients, and the medical team will be very careful to prevent addiction.
- B. Frequently, female patients and younger patients need higher doses of opioids to be comfortable.
- C. The increased risk of overdose is an inevitable risk of maintaining adequate pain control during cancer treatment.
- D. There is no absolute maximum opioid dose and her daughter is becoming more tolerant to the drug.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Patients requiring opioids for chronic pain, especially cancer patients, need increasing doses to relieve pain. The requirement for higher drug doses results in a greater drug tolerance, which is a physical dependency as opposed to addiction, which is a psychological dependency. The dose range is usually higher with cancer patients. Although tolerance to the drug will increase, addiction is not dose related, but is a separate psychological dependency issue. No research indicates that women and/or younger people need higher doses of morphine to be comfortable. Overdose is not an inevitable risk.
You are the case manager for a 35-year-old man being seen at a primary care clinic for chronic low back pain. When you meet with the patient, he says that he is having problems at work; in the past year he has been absent from work about once every 2 weeks, is short-tempered with other workers, feels tired all the time, and is worried about losing his job. You are developing this patients plan of care. On what should the goals for the plan of care focus?
- A. Increase the patients pain tolerance in order to achieve psychosocial benefits.
- B. Decrease the patients need to work and increase his sleep to 8 hours per night.
- C. Evaluate other work options to decrease the risk of depression and ineffective coping.
- D. Decrease the time lost from work to increase the quality of interpersonal relationships and decrease anxiety.
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Chronic pain may affect the patients quality of life by interfering with work, interpersonal relationships, or sleep. Thus, the best set of goals would be to decrease time lost from work to increase the quality of interpersonal relationships, and decrease anxiety. Increasing pain tolerance is an unrealistic and inappropriate goal; exercise could help, but would not be the focus of the plan of care. Decreasing the need to work does not address his pain. Evaluating other work options to decrease the risk of depression is a misdirected diagnosis.
You are frequently assessing an 84-year-old womans pain after she suffered a humeral fracture in a fall. When applying the nursing process in pain management for a patient of this age, what principle should you best apply?
- A. Monitor for signs of drug toxicity due to a decrease in metabolism.
- B. Monitor for an increase in absorption of the drug due to age-related changes.
- C. Monitor for a paradoxical increase in pain with opioid administration.
- D. Administer analgesics every 4 to 6 hours as ordered to control pain.
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Older people may respond differently to pain than younger people. Because elderly people have a slower metabolism and a greater ratio of body fat to muscle mass compared with younger people, small doses of analgesic agents may be sufficient to relieve pain, and these doses may be effective longer. This fact also corresponds to an increased risk of adverse effects. Paradoxical effects are not a common phenomenon. Frequency of administration will vary widely according to numerous variables.
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