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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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K. A patient with Graves’ disease develops hyperthermia, tachycardia, and agitation. What is the nurse’s immediate intervention?

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L. A charge nurse is making assignments. Which task is appropriate for a nursing assistant?

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M. A nurse is asked to assist with a procedure they have never performed before. What is the safest action?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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AA. A patient with traumatic brain injury develops continuous tonic–clonic activity lasting >5 minutes. What is the priority intervention?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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AL. A charge nurse must assign duties. Which task is most appropriate for a nursing assistant?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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AP. A nurse sees a coworker frequently cutting corners with infection control practices. What is the best nursing action?

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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?

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AR. A nurse witnesses a provider beginning a procedure on the wrong patient. What is the priority action?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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AX. A patient with pericarditis develops jugular venous distension, muffled heart sounds, and hypotension. What is the immediate nursing action?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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BU. A patient with pericarditis develops pulsus paradoxus, hypotension, and jugular venous distension. What is the nurse’s immediate action?

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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?

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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?

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BX. A nurse is assigned to more patients than can be safely managed. What is the most appropriate action?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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CL. A nurse witnesses a provider starting a procedure without confirming patient identity. What is the priority nursing action?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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CQ. A patient with necrotizing pancreatitis presents with septic shock and intra-abdominal hypertension. What is the immediate nursing action?

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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?

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CS. A patient after multiple bee stings develops hypotension, wheezing, and angioedema. What is the nurse’s immediate action?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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CW. A patient with cirrhosis develops confusion, asterixis, and ammonia 110 µmol/L. What is the priority nursing intervention?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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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?

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DR. A nurse feels uncomfortable with a physician’s repeated rude behavior toward staff. What is the most appropriate action?

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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?

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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?

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