PCCN Quiz -14
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A. A patient with acute pancreatitis presents with hypovolemia, severe abdominal pain, and Grey Turner’s sign. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
Oops! Revisit the management of severe pancreatitis.
Correct! Well done.
Severe pancreatitis with shock risk requires large-volume fluid resuscitation.
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B. A patient with Addison’s disease presents with severe hypotension, hyponatremia, and hyperkalemia. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
Oops! Revisit the management of adrenal crisis.
Addisonian crisis requires urgent steroids and fluids.
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C. A patient on high-flow oxygen for pneumonia suddenly develops sharp chest pain and absent breath sounds on the right. What is the next nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the management of pneumothorax.
Spontaneous pneumothorax requires immediate chest tube placement.
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D. A patient with pneumonia develops fever, tachycardia, hypotension (BP 72/40 mmHg), and mottled skin despite fluids. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
Oops! Revisit the Surviving Sepsis Campaign guidelines.
Persistent hypotension after fluids indicates septic shock, requiring vasopressors.
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E. A patient after a long bone fracture develops severe leg pain unrelieved by opioids, pallor, paresthesia, and weak pulses. What is the next nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the management of compartment syndrome.
Compartment syndrome requires emergent fasciotomy.
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F. A patient with hypertensive emergency presents with BP 230/120 mmHg, headache, and visual changes. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
Oops! Revisit the management of hypertensive emergencies.
Hypertensive emergency requires rapid BP control with IV agents under monitoring.
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G. A patient with sepsis remains hypotensive after 3 L of fluids. MAP 54 mmHg, lactate 6 mmol/L. What is the next nursing action?
Persistent hypotension after fluids indicates septic shock, requiring vasopressor therapy.
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H. A patient with acute pancreatitis presents with severe abdominal pain, hypotension, and Grey Turner’s sign. What is the priority nursing action?
Severe pancreatitis can cause hypovolemic shock, requiring fluid resuscitation.
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I. A patient develops acute agitation, hallucinations, and disorientation following ICU admission. Vitals stable, no focal deficits. What is the most appropriate initial nursing intervention?
Oops! Revisit the management of ICU delirium.
This is ICU delirium, treated with non-pharmacologic interventions first.
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J. A patient with acute pancreatitis develops severe abdominal distension, rising bladder pressure, and hypotension. What is the immediate nursing action?
Oops! Revisit complications of acute pancreatitis.
Pancreatitis can lead to abdominal compartment syndrome, requiring surgical decompression.
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K. A patient with Graves’ disease develops hyperthermia, tachycardia, and agitation. What is the nurse’s immediate intervention?
Oops! Revisit the management of thyroid storm.
This is a thyroid storm, requiring urgent pharmacologic control.
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L. A charge nurse is making assignments. Which task is appropriate for a nursing assistant?
Oops! Revisit the scope of practice for nursing assistants.
Nursing assistants may obtain vital signs but cannot interpret results or provide teaching.
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M. A nurse is asked to assist with a procedure they have never performed before. What is the safest action?
Oops! Revisit the principles of professional responsibility and patient safety.
Professional responsibility requires seeking help when lacking experience to protect patient safety.
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N. A patient on mechanical ventilation suddenly develops hypotension, absent breath sounds on the right, and tracheal deviation to the left. What is the immediate nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the management of tension pneumothorax.
Findings indicate tension pneumothorax, a life-threatening emergency.
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O. A patient in the ICU develops acute confusion, agitation, and fluctuating attention. Vitals stable, no focal neurological deficits. What is the most appropriate intervention?
This is ICU delirium, managed with non-pharmacologic interventions first.
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P. A patient with end-stage renal disease presents with confusion, pericardial rub, and hypotension. What should the nurse do next?
Oops! Revisit complications of ESRD.
Uremic pericarditis may lead to tamponade, requiring urgent evaluation.
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Q. A patient’s spouse angrily says, “You aren’t doing enough to save my partner.” What is the nurse’s best response?
Oops! Revisit principles of therapeutic communication and de-escalation.
Therapeutic communication involves validating concerns and providing clear support.
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R. A patient with multiple trauma and crush injury develops dark brown urine and CK 12,000 U/L. What is the priority nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the management of rhabdomyolysis.
Rhabdomyolysis can cause AKI; treated with aggressive fluids to flush myoglobin.
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S. A patient with Addison’s disease presents with BP 72/38 mmHg, Na⁺ 115 mEq/L, K⁺ 7.1 mEq/L, and severe weakness. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
Addisonian crisis requires urgent steroid replacement and fluids.
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T. A nurse realizes they administered a medication one hour late and did not notify the provider. What is the nurse’s best action?
Oops! Revisit the protocol for reporting medication errors.
Timely error reporting protects patient safety and maintains transparency.
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U. A patient with traumatic brain injury shows bradycardia, hypertension, and irregular respirations. ICP monitor shows 48 mmHg. What is the immediate nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the management of intracranial hypertension.
Signs of Cushing’s triad, requiring emergent neurosurgical evaluation.
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V. A mechanically ventilated patient suddenly shows SpO₂ 70%, high peak inspiratory pressures, and absent breath sounds on the left. What is the immediate action?
Tension pneumothorax in a ventilated patient is life-threatening and needs decompression.
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W. A patient after craniotomy develops sudden severe headache, unequal pupils, and vomiting. ICP monitor shows 50 mmHg. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
Findings indicate herniation syndrome, requiring emergent neurosurgical evaluation.
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X. A patient with a history of alcohol abuse presents with confusion, tremors, tachycardia, and hypertension 36 hours after last drink. What is the priority nursing intervention?
Oops! Revisit the management of alcohol withdrawal.
Alcohol withdrawal delirium tremens is treated with benzodiazepines.
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Y. A patient with severe hypothyroidism presents with hypothermia, bradycardia, hypotension, and altered mental status. What is the immediate nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the management of myxedema coma.
This is myxedema coma, requiring urgent thyroid hormone replacement and supportive care.
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Z. A patient with end-stage renal disease presents with K⁺ 7.5 mEq/L, peaked T waves, and ventricular tachycardia. What is the immediate nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the emergency management of hyperkalemia.
Calcium stabilizes the myocardium in life-threatening hyperkalemia.
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AA. A patient with traumatic brain injury develops continuous tonic–clonic activity lasting >5 minutes. What is the priority intervention?
Oops! Revisit the management of status epilepticus.
Status epilepticus is treated urgently with IV benzodiazepines.
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AB. A patient with acute decompensated heart failure presents with BP 86/50 mmHg, pulmonary edema, and cold extremities. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
Oops! Revisit the management of cardiogenic shock.
Findings indicate cardiogenic shock, requiring inotropic support.
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AC. A patient with chronic kidney disease presents with K⁺ 7.2 mEq/L and ventricular tachycardia on the monitor. What is the immediate intervention?
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AD. A nurse sees a coworker texting while preparing IV medications. What is the most appropriate action?
Oops! Revisit patient safety protocols regarding distractions.
Patient safety requires eliminating distractions during high-risk tasks.
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AE. A patient on hemodialysis develops confusion, nausea, and headache shortly after initiation of treatment. What is the priority nursing action?
Oops! Revisit complications of hemodialysis.
Neurological symptoms after dialysis suggest disequilibrium syndrome, a complication requiring intervention.
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AF. A patient with chronic kidney disease on dialysis presents with chest pain, pericardial friction rub, and hypotension. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
Uremic pericarditis can progress to tamponade and needs urgent evaluation.
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AG. A patient with cirrhosis presents with massive hematemesis. Octreotide has failed to control bleeding. BP 78/40 mmHg, HR 130 bpm. What is the next nursing intervention?
Oops! Revisit the management of refractory variceal bleeding.
Balloon tamponade is a rescue therapy for uncontrolled variceal hemorrhage.
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AH. A patient with acute kidney injury develops severe hyperkalemia (K⁺ 7.4 mEq/L) and ventricular tachycardia. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
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AI. A patient with multiple fractures develops confusion, dyspnea, and petechiae on the chest. SpO₂ 72% despite oxygen therapy. What is the immediate nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the signs and management of fat embolism syndrome.
Classic presentation of fat embolism syndrome, requiring supportive oxygen therapy.
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AJ. A patient with diabetic ketoacidosis has K⁺ 5.9 mEq/L before insulin infusion begins. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
Oops! Revisit electrolyte management in DKA.
Insulin lowers potassium; fluids plus close monitoring are critical in DKA with hyperkalemia.
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AK. A patient with Addison’s disease presents with BP 70/38 mmHg, Na⁺ 116 mEq/L, and K⁺ 7.3 mEq/L. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
Addisonian crisis is treated with steroids and fluids immediately.
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AL. A charge nurse must assign duties. Which task is most appropriate for a nursing assistant?
Basic hygiene and elimination tasks are within a nursing assistant’s scope.
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AM. A patient with seizure history develops sudden agitation, confusion, and fluctuating attention without tonic–clonic movements. What is the likely condition?
Oops! Revisit the differential diagnosis for altered mental status.
Altered awareness with fluctuating attention in ICU suggests delirium, not seizures.
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AN. A patient asks the nurse to share personal details about their life to “build trust.” What is the best response?
Oops! Revisit the principles of maintaining professional boundaries.
Maintaining boundaries ensures the relationship remains therapeutic and patient-focused.
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AO. A trauma patient with multiple fractures suddenly develops confusion, dyspnea, and petechiae over the chest. SpO₂ is 74% despite oxygen therapy. What is the immediate action?
Classic presentation of fat embolism syndrome, requiring supportive oxygen.
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AP. A nurse sees a coworker frequently cutting corners with infection control practices. What is the best nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the principles of professional accountability for patient safety.
Professional accountability requires addressing unsafe practices directly.
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AQ. A patient with Addison’s disease presents with profound hypotension, Na⁺ 118 mEq/L, and K⁺ 7.2 mEq/L. What is the priority nursing intervention?
Adrenal crisis requires urgent IV steroids and fluids.
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AR. A nurse witnesses a provider beginning a procedure on the wrong patient. What is the priority action?
Oops! Revisit patient safety protocols for preventing wrong-patient errors.
Advocacy requires protecting patient safety through positive identification before procedures.
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AS. A patient with septic shock remains hypotensive after 30 mL/kg fluid resuscitation. MAP is 54 mmHg, lactate 5 mmol/L. What is the next nursing intervention?
Persistent hypotension after fluids indicates septic shock, requiring vasopressor support.
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AT. A patient with ARDS on mechanical ventilation has PaO₂ 42 mmHg despite FiO₂ 100% and PEEP 18 cmH₂O. Plateau pressure is 26 cmH₂O. What is the next nursing action?
Oops! Revisit advanced ARDS management.
Prone positioning improves oxygenation in severe ARDS with safe plateau pressure.
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AU. An ICU patient suddenly develops acute agitation, disorientation, and hallucinations. Vitals are stable, no focal neuro deficits. What is the most appropriate initial nursing intervention?
Acute ICU delirium is managed with reorientation and non-pharmacologic measures first.
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AV. A patient with multiple fractures develops tachypnea, hypoxemia, confusion, and petechiae on the chest. What is the priority nursing intervention?
This is fat embolism syndrome, requiring supportive oxygen therapy.
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AW. A nurse learns that a patient’s lab result indicating a critical potassium level was not reported to the provider. What is the nurse’s best action?
Oops! Revisit the protocol for reporting critical lab values.
Advocacy and safety require prompt reporting of critical results.
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AX. A patient with pericarditis develops jugular venous distension, muffled heart sounds, and hypotension. What is the immediate nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the signs and management of cardiac tamponade.
Beck’s triad indicates cardiac tamponade, requiring urgent pericardiocentesis.
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AY. A postoperative patient suddenly develops chest pain, tachypnea, dyspnea, and SpO₂ 78% despite oxygen. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
Oops! Revisit the management of suspected pulmonary embolism.
Presentation suggests pulmonary embolism.
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AZ. A patient with acute kidney injury develops pH 7.10, HCO₃⁻ 12 mEq/L, K⁺ 6.7 mEq/L, and Kussmaul respirations. What is the priority nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the management of severe metabolic acidosis.
Severe metabolic acidosis with hyperkalemia requires immediate bicarbonate therapy.
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BA. A septic patient presents with fever, BP 76/40 mmHg, HR 138, and lactate 5 mmol/L. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
Oops! Revisit the Surviving Sepsis Campaign ‘Hour-1 Bundle’.
Early septic shock management requires fluids before vasopressors.
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BB. A patient after a crush injury develops severe leg pain, pallor, paresthesia, and tense swelling. Distal pulses are weak. What is the immediate nursing action?
Compartment syndrome is a surgical emergency requiring fasciotomy.
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BC. A patient with septic shock remains hypotensive after 3 L of IV fluids. MAP 55 mmHg, lactate 6 mmol/L. What is the next nursing action?
Persistent hypotension after fluids defines septic shock, requiring vasopressor therapy.
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BD. A patient with blunt chest trauma develops muffled heart sounds, jugular venous distension, and hypotension. What is the immediate nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the management of cardiac tamponade.
This is cardiac tamponade, requiring immediate intervention.
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BE. A patient refuses a blood transfusion due to religious beliefs despite severe anemia. What is the nurse’s best action?
Oops! Revisit the principles of patient autonomy.
Advocacy requires respecting autonomy while informing the team of critical refusals.
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BF. A patient with sudden tearing chest pain radiating to the back has unequal blood pressures in the arms. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
Oops! Revisit the signs of aortic dissection.
Classic aortic dissection; requires urgent imaging and surgical consult.
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BG. A family member asks detailed questions about another patient in the same room. What is the nurse’s most appropriate response?
Oops! Revisit patient privacy and HIPAA regulations.
Advocacy requires protecting patient privacy under HIPAA and professional standards.
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BH. A patient with severe pneumonia on mechanical ventilation shows PaO₂ 44 mmHg on FiO₂ 100% and PEEP 20 cmH₂O. Plateau pressure is 27 cmH₂O. What is the priority action?
Prone positioning improves oxygenation in severe ARDS.
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BI. A patient with traumatic brain injury presents with bradycardia, hypertension, and irregular respirations. ICP monitor shows 47 mmHg. What is the priority nursing action?
Findings indicate Cushing’s triad, requiring urgent neurosurgical care.
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BJ. A patient with severe asthma exacerbation becomes drowsy. SpO₂ is 77% despite oxygen, and breath sounds are silent. What is the next nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the management of status asthmaticus.
A silent chest indicates impending respiratory failure.
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BK. A patient receiving high PEEP for ARDS suddenly develops tachycardia, hypotension, and tracheal deviation. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
Oops! Revisit complications of mechanical ventilation.
High PEEP can precipitate a tension pneumothorax, requiring immediate decompression.
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BL. A patient with severe COPD exacerbation becomes somnolent. ABG: pH 7.22, PaCO₂ 78 mmHg, PaO₂ 52 mmHg on BiPAP. What is the next nursing action?
Oops! Revisit indications for intubation in respiratory failure.
Rising CO₂ with altered mental status shows BiPAP failure, requiring intubation.
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BM. A patient with seizure disorder develops continuous tonic–clonic activity lasting >5 minutes without regaining consciousness. What is the priority nursing action?
Status epilepticus is a neurologic emergency requiring immediate IV benzodiazepines.
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BN. A patient with Addison’s disease arrives with BP 72/40 mmHg, Na⁺ 116 mEq/L, and K⁺ 7.1 mEq/L. What is the immediate intervention?
Addisonian crisis requires urgent IV steroids and fluid resuscitation.
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BO. A patient’s family is upset that visiting hours are restricted after surgery. What is the nurse’s best action?
Oops! Revisit principles of empathetic communication.
Caring practice involves empathetic communication while upholding hospital policies.
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BP. A patient with dilated cardiomyopathy presents with dyspnea, pulmonary edema, and BP 78/46 mmHg. What is the priority nursing action?
Cardiogenic shock from dilated cardiomyopathy requires inotropic support.
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BQ. A patient with Graves’ disease develops fever 40°C, tachycardia 160 bpm, and agitation. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
This is thyroid storm, managed with beta-blockers and antithyroid therapy.
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BR. A patient on hemodialysis develops severe headache, nausea, and confusion 1 hour after starting treatment. What is the priority nursing action?
Neurological changes during dialysis suggest disequilibrium syndrome.
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BS. A patient with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy collapses during exercise, presenting with syncope and systolic murmur at the left sternal border. What is the priority nursing intervention?
Oops! Revisit the management of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is managed with beta-blockers and volume support, not exertion.
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BT. A patient with ARDS on mechanical ventilation has plateau pressures >30 cmH₂O despite low tidal volumes. PaO₂ remains <55 mmHg on FiO₂ 100%. What is the next nursing action?
Oops! Revisit advanced therapies for ARDS.
Refractory ARDS unresponsive to ventilation strategies requires ECMO consideration.
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BU. A patient with pericarditis develops pulsus paradoxus, hypotension, and jugular venous distension. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
Findings suggest progression to cardiac tamponade.
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BV. A patient with Marfan syndrome presents with acute chest pain radiating to the back, BP 70/40 mmHg, and pulse deficit in the left arm. What is the immediate action?
Classic aortic dissection with hemodynamic instability → requires surgical repair.
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BW. A patient with acute kidney injury has K⁺ 6.9 mEq/L, peaked T waves on ECG, and confusion. What is the immediate nursing action?
This rapidly shifts potassium intracellularly, preventing arrhythmias.
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BX. A nurse is assigned to more patients than can be safely managed. What is the most appropriate action?
Oops! Revisit the nurse’s advocacy role for safe patient loads.
Advocacy includes speaking up about unsafe workloads to protect patient safety.
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BY. During bedside report, a nurse notices a colleague discussing another patient’s diagnosis within earshot of visitors. What is the most appropriate action?
Oops! Revisit patient confidentiality regulations.
Professionalism requires addressing confidentiality breaches respectfully.
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BZ. A patient with septic shock on norepinephrine has urine output <10 mL/hr, lactate 7 mmol/L, and refractory acidosis. What is the next nursing action?
Oops! Revisit indications for CRRT.
Persistent shock with renal failure and acidosis requires CRRT initiation.
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CA. A patient with severe sepsis continues to deteriorate despite antibiotics and vasopressors. Lactate is 6 mmol/L, urine output <10 mL/hr. What is the next nursing priority?
Oops! Revisit the management of multiorgan dysfunction.
Multiorgan dysfunction with refractory acidosis/renal failure in sepsis requires CRRT initiation.
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CB. A patient presents with severe abdominal distension, vomiting, and absent bowel movements for 4 days. Imaging shows dilated loops of bowel with air–fluid levels. What is the priority nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the management of bowel obstruction.
Findings indicate bowel obstruction, initially managed with NG decompression.
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CC. A patient with chronic kidney disease has K⁺ 7.2 mEq/L, peaked T waves, and wide QRS complexes. What is the priority nursing action?
Calcium stabilizes the myocardium in severe hyperkalemia.
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CD. A patient becomes angry when told visiting hours are over and demands an exception. What is the nurse’s best action?
Oops! Revisit principles of caring practice and policy enforcement.
Caring practice requires empathetic communication while upholding hospital policy.
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CE. A patient asks, “Why must I continue wearing oxygen if I feel fine?” What is the nurse’s best response?
Oops! Revisit principles of patient education.
Education clarifies the purpose of oxygen therapy and promotes adherence.
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CF. A patient with aortic stenosis collapses during exertion, presenting with syncope, systolic murmur, and hypotension. What is the immediate nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the management of symptomatic aortic stenosis.
Symptomatic aortic stenosis requires urgent valve intervention.
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CG. A patient with type 1 diabetes presents with glucose 520 mg/dL, fruity breath odor, and Kussmaul respirations. ABG: pH 7.18, HCO₃⁻ 12 mEq/L. What is the immediate nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the management of DKA.
This is DKA, requiring prompt insulin infusion and fluids.
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CH. A patient with history of epilepsy becomes unresponsive with continuous seizure activity lasting 10 minutes. What is the nurse’s priority action?
Status epilepticus requires immediate benzodiazepine therapy.
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CI. A patient with long bone fracture develops sudden dyspnea, confusion, and petechiae over the chest. SpO₂ is 74% despite oxygen therapy. What is the priority action?
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CJ. A patient with acute pancreatitis has persistent abdominal distension, rising bladder pressures, and hypotension. What is the priority nursing intervention?
Severe pancreatitis can cause abdominal compartment syndrome, requiring surgical decompression.
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CK. A patient’s family insists on aggressive treatment that conflicts with the patient’s advance directive. What is the nurse’s best action?
Oops! Revisit the nurse’s advocacy role regarding advance directives.
Advocacy requires prioritizing the patient’s advance directive over family preferences.
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CL. A nurse witnesses a provider starting a procedure without confirming patient identity. What is the priority nursing action?
Oops! Revisit patient safety protocols for patient identification.
Patient safety requires positive identification before any procedure.
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CM. A patient with long-standing hypothyroidism is admitted with hypothermia, bradycardia, hypotension, and altered mental status. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
This is myxedema coma, a life-threatening emergency.
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CN. A patient with pneumonia suddenly develops pleuritic chest pain, dyspnea, tachycardia, and SpO₂ 80% on oxygen. What is the next nursing action?
These findings suggest pulmonary embolism, confirmed by CT angiography.
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CO. A dialysis patient becomes confused, nauseated, and has headache within an hour after treatment. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
Neurological symptoms after dialysis suggest disequilibrium syndrome, requiring urgent evaluation.
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CP. A patient with traumatic brain injury becomes increasingly drowsy, develops unequal pupils, and ICP rises to 50 mmHg. What is the immediate nursing action?
Signs of herniation require urgent neurosurgical evaluation.
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CQ. A patient with necrotizing pancreatitis presents with septic shock and intra-abdominal hypertension. What is the immediate nursing action?
Oops! Revisit complications of severe pancreatitis.
Abdominal compartment syndrome from necrotizing pancreatitis needs surgical decompression.
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CR. A young adult with type 1 diabetes presents with polyuria, Kussmaul respirations, and fruity breath odor. Labs: pH 7.15, glucose 480 mg/dL. What is the immediate nursing action?
Classic DKA, requiring insulin and fluids.
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CS. A patient after multiple bee stings develops hypotension, wheezing, and angioedema. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
Oops! Revisit the management of anaphylaxis.
Anaphylaxis requires immediate epinephrine administration.
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CT. A patient with crush injury reports severe pain out of proportion to injury, pallor, paresthesia, and tense swelling of the leg. What is the next nursing action?
Compartment syndrome requires urgent surgical fasciotomy.
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CU. A patient with trauma and prolonged immobilization develops dark tea-colored urine and CK 18,000 U/L. What is the immediate priority?
Rhabdomyolysis must be managed with high-volume IV fluids to protect kidneys.
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CV. A patient with long-standing hypothyroidism presents with hypothermia, bradycardia, hypotension, and altered mental status. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
This is myxedema coma, requiring thyroid hormone replacement and supportive care.
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CW. A patient with cirrhosis develops confusion, asterixis, and ammonia 110 µmol/L. What is the priority nursing intervention?
Oops! Revisit the management of hepatic encephalopathy.
Lactulose reduces ammonia absorption, treating hepatic encephalopathy.
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CX. A patient with acute MI suddenly develops severe chest pain, hypotension, and a new loud systolic murmur at the apex. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
Oops! Revisit mechanical complications of MI.
Suggests papillary muscle rupture, requiring surgical intervention.
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CY. A patient with multiple fractures reports sudden dyspnea, hypoxemia, and petechiae on the chest. SpO₂ 74% despite oxygen. What is the immediate nursing action?
This is fat embolism syndrome, managed with supportive oxygenation.
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CZ. A patient with cirrhosis develops massive hematemesis. Despite octreotide, bleeding persists. BP 76/40 mmHg, HR 128 bpm. What is the next nursing action?
Balloon tamponade is a rescue therapy for uncontrolled variceal bleeding.
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DA. A patient on mechanical ventilation shows high peak pressures, hypoxemia, and absent breath sounds on the left. What is the immediate nursing action?
Findings indicate tension pneumothorax, requiring urgent chest tube placement.
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DB. A patient with advanced cancer states, “I do not want resuscitation if my heart stops.” What should the nurse do first?
Oops! Revisit the nurse’s role in documenting end-of-life wishes.
Advocacy requires honoring patient autonomy and ensuring the team is aware.
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DC. A patient with multiple fractures develops severe leg pain unrelieved by opioids, pallor, paresthesia, and tense swelling. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
Compartment syndrome requires urgent fasciotomy.
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DD. A patient with a crush injury develops dark tea-colored urine, CK 20,000 U/L, and rising creatinine. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
Rhabdomyolysis is treated with fluids to prevent kidney failure.
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DE. A patient with untreated hyperthyroidism presents with fever 40°C, tachycardia 160 bpm, agitation, and diaphoresis. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
This is thyroid storm, a life-threatening endocrine emergency.
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DF. During a rapid response, a provider requests a high-risk medication that seems inappropriate for the patient’s condition. What should the nurse do first?
Oops! Revisit the nurse’s role in questioning orders.
Advocacy includes questioning potentially unsafe orders before carrying them out.
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DG. A patient with Addison’s disease presents with hypotension, confusion, Na⁺ 118 mEq/L, and K⁺ 7.0 mEq/L. What is the immediate intervention?
Adrenal crisis is life-threatening and treated with steroids and fluids.
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DH. A patient with type 1 diabetes presents with glucose 520 mg/dL, fruity breath odor, and Kussmaul respirations. ABG: pH 7.18, HCO₃⁻ 12 mEq/L. What is the immediate nursing action?
This is DKA, treated with fluids and IV insulin.
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DI. A patient tells the nurse, “I want to stop all treatments and go home.” What is the nurse’s best response?
Oops! Revisit principles of therapeutic communication in end-of-life care.
Open-ended therapeutic communication validates patient concerns and supports autonomy.
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DJ. A patient with COPD exacerbation on BiPAP becomes lethargic. ABG: pH 7.19, PaCO₂ 85 mmHg, PaO₂ 50 mmHg. What is the next nursing action?
Progressive hypercapnia and decreased consciousness indicate NIV failure.
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DK. A dialysis patient develops chest pain, hypotension, and pericardial friction rub. What should the nurse do next?
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DL. A nurse witnesses a provider about to start a central line insertion without verifying consent. What is the priority nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the nurse’s advocacy role in patient safety.
Advocacy requires ensuring informed consent is confirmed before invasive procedures.
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DM. A patient develops sudden hypotension, stridor, urticaria, and wheezing immediately after receiving IV antibiotics. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
This is anaphylaxis, requiring immediate epinephrine.
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DN. A patient with chronic kidney disease presents with K⁺ 6.8 mEq/L, peaked T waves, and confusion. What is the immediate intervention?
This rapidly lowers serum potassium while awaiting dialysis.
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DO. A trauma patient with prolonged limb compression develops dark red urine and CK 15,000 U/L. What is the immediate nursing action?
Rhabdomyolysis requires hydration to prevent renal injury.
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DP. A patient with multiple fractures complains of severe leg pain out of proportion to injury, with paresthesia and pallor. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
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DQ. A patient’s spouse says, “I don’t know how much longer I can take care of them at home.” What is the nurse’s best response?
Oops! Revisit the concept of systems thinking for caregiver support.
Systems thinking requires recognizing caregiver strain and connecting families to resources.
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DR. A nurse feels uncomfortable with a physician’s repeated rude behavior toward staff. What is the most appropriate action?
Oops! Revisit the process for addressing disruptive behavior in the workplace.
Systems thinking requires addressing disruptive behavior to protect team function and patient safety.
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DS. A trauma patient complains of excruciating leg pain unrelieved by opioids, paresthesia, pallor, and absent pulses. What is the immediate nursing action?
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DT. A patient with small bowel obstruction has severe distension, bilious vomiting, and tachycardia. What is the priority nursing intervention?
Bowel obstruction is initially managed with NG decompression to reduce pressure.
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DU. A patient with acute STEMI develops chest pain, diaphoresis, and BP 78/46 mmHg. Crackles are present bilaterally. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
Cardiogenic shock after MI requires inotropic support, not nitrates.
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