PCCN Quiz -12
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A. A patient with anterior MI develops acute pulmonary edema, hypotension, and a new systolic murmur at the apex. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
Oops! Revisit mechanical complications of MI.
Correct! Well done.
Suggests papillary muscle rupture, a surgical emergency.
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B. A patient with multiple long-bone fractures suddenly develops confusion, dyspnea, and petechial rash. SpO₂ is 74% despite oxygen therapy. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
Oops! Revisit the signs and management of fat embolism syndrome.
This is fat embolism syndrome, requiring urgent supportive care.
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C. A patient with anterior MI develops hypotension, pulmonary edema, and cool extremities. Echocardiogram shows EF 22%. What is the immediate nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the management of cardiogenic shock.
Cardiogenic shock requires inotropic support.
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D. A patient with septic shock remains hypotensive despite 30 mL/kg IV fluids and norepinephrine infusion. MAP 54 mmHg, lactate 7.1 mmol/L. What is the next nursing action?
Oops! Revisit advanced sepsis management.
Refractory septic shock requires vasopressin as adjunct vasopressor.
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E. A patient with a tibial fracture reports severe pain unrelieved by opioids, pallor, and paresthesia. Pain worsens with passive stretch. What is the immediate nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the management of compartment syndrome.
These are signs of compartment syndrome, a surgical emergency.
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F. A patient with Addison’s disease arrives with severe hypotension, Na⁺ 115 mEq/L, K⁺ 7.1 mEq/L, and confusion. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
Oops! Revisit the management of adrenal crisis.
Addisonian crisis requires urgent steroids and fluids.
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G. A patient with Addison’s disease arrives with severe hypotension, Na⁺ 116 mEq/L, K⁺ 7.2 mEq/L, and confusion. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
Addisonian crisis requires urgent corticosteroids and IV fluids.
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H. A patient with Addison’s disease presents with severe hypotension, Na⁺ 116 mEq/L, K⁺ 7.3 mEq/L, and confusion. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
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I. A patient with anterior MI develops acute pulmonary edema, hypotension, and a new loud systolic murmur. What is the immediate nursing action?
This suggests papillary muscle rupture, a surgical emergency.
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J. A patient with multiple fractures suddenly develops confusion, dyspnea, and a petechial rash. SpO₂ is 75% despite oxygen therapy. What is the priority nursing action?
Classic presentation of fat embolism syndrome, requiring urgent supportive care.
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K. A patient with anterior MI develops acute pulmonary edema and hypotension. Echocardiogram shows EF 20%. What is the immediate nursing action?
This is cardiogenic shock, requiring inotropes.
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L. A patient with multiple long-bone fractures suddenly develops confusion, dyspnea, and petechial rash. SpO₂ is 75% despite oxygen. What is the next nursing intervention?
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M. A patient with multiple long-bone fractures suddenly develops confusion, dyspnea, and a petechial rash on the chest. SpO₂ is 75% despite oxygen. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
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N. A patient with Addison’s disease is admitted with severe hypotension, Na⁺ 114 mEq/L, K⁺ 7.1 mEq/L, and confusion. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
Addisonian crisis requires urgent corticosteroid replacement and fluids.
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O. A patient with myxedema coma arrives with hypothermia, bradycardia, and altered mental status. What is the priority nursing intervention?
Oops! Revisit the management of myxedema coma.
Myxedema coma requires IV thyroid hormone replacement and cautious rewarming.
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P. A patient with cirrhosis and portal hypertension presents with hematemesis. Despite octreotide infusion, bleeding persists. BP 80/42 mmHg. What is the next nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the management of refractory variceal bleeding.
Balloon tamponade is a rescue therapy for uncontrolled variceal bleeding.
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Q. A patient with myxedema coma presents with hypothermia, bradycardia, and altered mental status. What is the priority nursing intervention?
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R. A patient with traumatic brain injury develops bradycardia, hypertension, and irregular respirations. ICP monitor reads 45 mmHg. What is the priority nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the management of intracranial hypertension.
This is Cushing’s triad, requiring urgent neurosurgical intervention.
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S. A patient with traumatic brain injury develops bradycardia, hypertension, and irregular respirations. ICP monitor shows 44 mmHg. What is the immediate nursing action?
This is Cushing’s triad, requiring urgent neurosurgical evaluation.
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T. A patient’s family is arguing about who should make healthcare decisions. What is the nurse’s best action?
Oops! Revisit the nurse’s role in facilitating ethical decision-making.
Nurses support ethical practice by encouraging structured communication to resolve conflict.
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U. A patient says, “I don’t understand why I need these blood pressure medications if I feel fine.” What is the nurse’s best response?
Oops! Revisit principles of patient education for asymptomatic conditions.
Education supports adherence by clarifying the purpose of medications.
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V. A patient’s family asks the nurse not to tell the patient about a poor prognosis. What is the nurse’s best response?
Oops! Revisit the ethical principles of truth-telling and patient autonomy.
Advocacy and ethical practice require supporting truth-telling and patient autonomy.
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W. A patient with traumatic brain injury develops bradycardia, hypertension, and irregular respirations. ICP monitor shows 45 mmHg. What is the priority nursing intervention?
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X. A patient with septic shock remains hypotensive despite 30 mL/kg IV fluids and norepinephrine infusion. MAP 53 mmHg, lactate 7.1 mmol/L. What is the next nursing action?
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Y. A patient with Addison’s disease arrives with severe hypotension, Na⁺ 116 mEq/L, K⁺ 7.2 mEq/L, and confusion. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
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Z. A nurse is told to continue aggressive treatment that conflicts with the patient’s stated wishes. What is the nurse’s priority action?
Oops! Revisit the nurse’s advocacy role in cases of moral distress.
Advocacy includes addressing moral distress by escalating concerns to protect patient autonomy.
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AA. A nurse overhears a colleague mocking a patient’s appearance. What is the most appropriate action?
Oops! Revisit principles of professional conduct.
Professionalism requires addressing disrespectful behavior to maintain patient dignity.
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AB. A nurse observes a colleague documenting care that was not provided. What is the most appropriate action?
Oops! Revisit principles of professional accountability.
Professional accountability requires confronting unsafe or unethical practices respectfully.
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AC. A patient with traumatic brain injury develops bradycardia, hypertension, and irregular respirations. ICP monitor shows 46 mmHg. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
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AD. A patient with severe pneumonia is intubated. PaO₂ remains 48 mmHg despite FiO₂ 100% and PEEP 18 cmH₂O. Plateau pressure 27 cmH₂O. What is the next nursing intervention?
Oops! Revisit advanced ARDS management.
Prone positioning improves oxygenation in refractory ARDS.
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AE. A patient asks the nurse for personal phone numbers to stay in touch after discharge. What is the most appropriate nursing response?
Oops! Revisit principles of professional boundaries.
Maintaining professional boundaries preserves therapeutic relationships and prevents ethical conflicts.
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AF. A patient with traumatic brain injury develops bradycardia, hypertension, and irregular respirations. ICP monitor shows 46 mmHg. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
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AG. A trauma patient with a tibia fracture reports severe pain unrelieved by opioids, paresthesia, and pallor. Pain worsens with passive stretch. What is the priority intervention?
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AH. A patient with traumatic brain injury develops bradycardia, hypertension, and irregular respirations. ICP is 43 mmHg. What is the immediate nursing action?
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AI. A patient with severe COPD exacerbation on BiPAP becomes progressively drowsy. ABG: pH 7.14, PaCO₂ 95 mmHg, PaO₂ 50 mmHg. What is the next nursing intervention?
Oops! Revisit indications for intubation in respiratory failure.
Severe hypercapnia with altered mental status indicates failure of noninvasive ventilation.
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AJ. A patient with cirrhosis presents with hematemesis. Octreotide infusion is running, but bleeding continues. BP is 80/44 mmHg. What is the next nursing action?
Balloon tamponade is a rescue measure for uncontrolled variceal bleeding.
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AK. A patient with myxedema coma is admitted with hypothermia, bradycardia, and altered mental status. What is the priority nursing intervention?
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AL. A nurse witnesses a provider refusing to address a patient’s question about treatment risks. What is the priority nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the nurse’s advocacy role in informed consent.
Advocacy requires ensuring informed consent with full understanding of risks and benefits.
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AM. A patient with Addison’s disease arrives with BP 78/40 mmHg, Na⁺ 114 mEq/L, K⁺ 7.2 mEq/L, and confusion. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
Addisonian crisis requires corticosteroid replacement and fluids.
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AN. A patient with a tibial fracture develops severe pain unrelieved by opioids, paresthesia, and pallor. Pain increases with passive stretch. What is the immediate nursing action?
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AO. A patient with severe COPD exacerbation on BiPAP becomes increasingly drowsy. ABG: pH 7.16, PaCO₂ 92 mmHg, PaO₂ 51 mmHg. What is the next nursing intervention?
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AP. A patient with septic shock remains hypotensive despite fluid resuscitation and norepinephrine infusion. MAP 55 mmHg, lactate 7 mmol/L. What is the next nursing action?
Refractory septic shock requires vasopressin as an adjunct vasopressor.
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AQ. A patient with pneumonia on mechanical ventilation has PaO₂ 47 mmHg despite FiO₂ 100% and PEEP 18 cmH₂O. Plateau pressure 26 cmH₂O. What is the next nursing intervention?
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AR. A patient with end-stage renal disease presents with potassium 7.9 mEq/L and peaked T waves. Calcium gluconate was administered. What is the next nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the emergency management of hyperkalemia.
Insulin shifts potassium intracellularly, stabilizing until dialysis.
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AS. A patient with cirrhosis presents with massive hematemesis. Despite octreotide infusion, bleeding continues. BP 82/40 mmHg. What is the next nursing action?
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AT. A patient with septic shock remains hypotensive despite 30 mL/kg IV fluids and norepinephrine. MAP 54 mmHg, lactate 6.8 mmol/L. What is the next nursing action?
Refractory septic shock requires vasopressin as adjunct to norepinephrine.
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AU. A patient with a tibial fracture reports severe pain unrelieved by opioids, paresthesia, and pallor. Pain worsens with passive stretch. What is the immediate nursing action?
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AV. A patient with cirrhosis presents with massive hematemesis. Despite octreotide infusion, bleeding continues. BP 82/42 mmHg. What is the next nursing action?
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AW. A patient with severe COPD exacerbation on BiPAP becomes unresponsive. ABG: pH 7.12, PaCO₂ 96 mmHg, PaO₂ 49 mmHg. What is the next nursing intervention?
Severe hypercapnia with altered consciousness requires immediate intubation.
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AX. A trauma patient with a femur fracture reports severe pain unrelieved by opioids, paresthesia, and pallor. Pain increases with passive stretch. What is the priority nursing action?
This is compartment syndrome, a surgical emergency.
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AY. A patient with cirrhosis develops massive hematemesis. Octreotide and endoscopic therapy have failed. BP 80/42 mmHg, HR 128 bpm. What is the next nursing action?
Balloon tamponade is a rescue measure when standard interventions fail.
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AZ. A patient with multiple long-bone fractures suddenly develops confusion, dyspnea, and petechiae on the chest. SpO₂ 74% despite oxygen. What is the next nursing action?
This is fat embolism syndrome, requiring rapid oxygenation and supportive care.
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BA. A patient with septic shock remains hypotensive after 30 mL/kg fluids and norepinephrine. MAP is 55 mmHg, lactate 7 mmol/L. What is the next nursing action?
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BB. A patient with anterior MI develops acute pulmonary edema, hypotension, and a new systolic murmur at the apex. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
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BC. During handoff, a nurse overhears a senior colleague belittling a junior nurse in front of the team. What is the most appropriate response?
Oops! Revisit principles of professional conduct and addressing incivility.
Professionalism requires addressing disrespectful behavior to foster a healthy work environment.
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BD. A patient with traumatic brain injury develops bradycardia, hypertension, and irregular respirations. ICP monitor reads 45 mmHg. What is the immediate nursing action?
This is Cushing’s triad, requiring urgent neurosurgical action.
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BE. A patient with a tibial fracture reports severe pain unrelieved by opioids, paresthesia, and pallor. Pain worsens with passive stretch. What is the immediate nursing action?
58 / 125
BF. A patient with severe COPD exacerbation on BiPAP becomes progressively drowsy. ABG: pH 7.14, PaCO₂ 95 mmHg, PaO₂ 50 mmHg. What is the next nursing intervention?
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BG. A patient with end-stage renal disease presents with potassium 7.6 mEq/L and wide QRS complexes. Calcium gluconate was given. What is the next nursing action?
Insulin shifts potassium into cells, stabilizing until dialysis.
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BH. A patient with anterior MI develops acute pulmonary edema, hypotension, and a new systolic murmur at the apex. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
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BI. A new nurse feels pressured to perform a procedure they are not trained for. What is the most appropriate action?
Oops! Revisit principles of professional responsibility and scope of practice.
Patient safety and professionalism require declining tasks outside one’s competence until trained.
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BJ. A patient with severe pneumonia on mechanical ventilation has PaO₂ 45 mmHg despite FiO₂ 100% and PEEP 18 cmH₂O. Plateau pressure is 26 cmH₂O. What is the next nursing intervention?
Prone positioning improves oxygenation in refractory ARDS with safe plateau pressures.
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BK. A patient with severe asthma exacerbation becomes suddenly quiet on auscultation. SpO₂ 80% despite high-flow oxygen. What is the next nursing intervention?
Oops! Revisit the management of status asthmaticus.
A silent chest indicates life-threatening airway obstruction and impending respiratory failure.
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BL. A patient with a tibial fracture develops severe pain unrelieved by opioids, pallor, paresthesia, and pain on passive stretch. What is the immediate nursing action?
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BM. A patient with end-stage renal disease presents with potassium 7.8 mEq/L and ECG showing wide QRS complexes. Calcium gluconate has been given. What is the next nursing action?
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BN. A patient with Addison’s disease arrives with BP 76/40 mmHg, Na⁺ 115 mEq/L, K⁺ 7.4 mEq/L, and confusion. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
Addisonian crisis requires urgent steroids with fluid resuscitation.
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BO. A patient with a tibial fracture develops severe pain unrelieved by opioids, pallor, paresthesia, and pain on passive stretch. What is the immediate nursing action?
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BP. A patient with traumatic brain injury develops bradycardia, hypertension, and irregular respirations. ICP monitor shows 45 mmHg. What is the priority nursing action?
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BQ. A patient with septic shock remains hypotensive despite 30 mL/kg IV fluids and norepinephrine infusion. MAP 54 mmHg, lactate 6.8 mmol/L. What is the next nursing action?
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BR. A patient with myxedema coma is admitted with hypothermia, bradycardia, and altered mental status. What is the priority nursing intervention?
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BS. A patient with cirrhosis presents with massive hematemesis. Despite octreotide infusion, bleeding continues. BP 78/42 mmHg. What is the next nursing action?
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BT. A patient with end-stage renal disease presents with K⁺ 7.8 mEq/L and wide QRS complexes. Calcium gluconate was given. What is the next nursing action?
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BU. A patient with multiple fractures develops sudden confusion, dyspnea, and a petechial rash. SpO₂ 74% despite oxygen therapy. What is the next nursing action?
Classic presentation of fat embolism syndrome, requiring urgent oxygenation and supportive care.
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BV. A patient with myxedema coma presents with hypothermia, bradycardia, and altered mental status. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
Myxedema coma requires IV thyroid hormone and gentle rewarming.
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BW. A patient with anterior MI develops acute pulmonary edema, hypotension, and a new systolic murmur at the apex. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
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BX. A patient with severe pneumonia on mechanical ventilation has PaO₂ 45 mmHg despite FiO₂ 100% and PEEP 18 cmH₂O. Plateau pressure 26 cmH₂O. What is the next nursing intervention?
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BY. A charge nurse must assign tasks to the team. Which task is appropriate for a licensed practical nurse (LPN)?
Oops! Revisit the scope of practice for LPNs.
LPNs may monitor stable patients but cannot perform initial assessments or complex teaching.
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BZ. A nurse discovers that a coworker posted a photo of a patient on social media without consent. What is the nurse’s best action?
Oops! Revisit patient confidentiality and social media policies.
Posting patient information violates confidentiality and must be reported to protect patient rights and privacy.
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CA. A patient with multiple fractures suddenly develops confusion, dyspnea, and petechial rash. SpO₂ is 75% despite oxygen therapy. What is the priority nursing action?
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CB. A patient with cirrhosis presents with hematemesis. Octreotide infusion is running, but bleeding continues. BP is 80/44 mmHg. What is the next nursing action?
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CC. A patient asks, “Why do I need to use this walker after surgery?” What is the nurse’s best response?
Oops! Revisit principles of patient safety education.
Patient education should emphasize safety and benefits of the intervention.
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CD. A patient with myxedema coma arrives with hypothermia, bradycardia, and altered mental status. What is the priority nursing intervention?
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CE. A patient with traumatic brain injury develops bradycardia, hypertension, and irregular respirations. ICP monitor shows 44 mmHg. What is the nurse’s priority action?
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CF. A patient with cirrhosis presents with massive hematemesis. Despite octreotide infusion, bleeding continues. BP is 82/42 mmHg. What is the next nursing action?
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CG. A nurse learns that staff on another shift routinely skips double-checking high-alert medications. What is the nurse’s best action?
Oops! Revisit procedures for reporting unsafe practices.
Whistleblowing through official channels protects patient safety while maintaining professionalism.
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CH. A patient with severe pneumonia on mechanical ventilation has PaO₂ 45 mmHg despite FiO₂ 100% and PEEP 18 cmH₂O. Plateau pressure is 26 cmH₂O. What is the next nursing intervention?
87 / 125
CI. A patient with end-stage renal disease presents with K⁺ 7.9 mEq/L, muscle weakness, and peaked T waves. Calcium gluconate was already given. What is the next nursing action?
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CJ. A patient with a tibial fracture reports severe pain unrelieved by opioids, pallor, and paresthesia. Pain worsens with passive stretch. What is the immediate nursing action?
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CK. A patient with anterior MI develops acute pulmonary edema, hypotension, and cool extremities. Echocardiogram shows EF 20%. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
This is cardiogenic shock, requiring inotropic support.
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CL. A patient with traumatic brain injury develops bradycardia, hypertension, and irregular respirations. ICP monitor shows 44 mmHg. What is the priority nursing intervention?
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CM. A patient asks, “Why do I need to wear these anti-embolism stockings?” What is the nurse’s best response?
Oops! Revisit principles of patient education.
Patient education should emphasize the purpose and benefits of interventions to encourage compliance.
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CN. A caregiver says, “I feel like I can’t keep doing this—it’s too much for me.” What is the nurse’s best response?
Oops! Revisit the concept of systems thinking for caregiver support.
Systems thinking requires addressing caregiver strain and connecting families with supportive services.
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CO. A patient with septic shock remains hypotensive despite 30 mL/kg fluids and norepinephrine infusion. MAP 53 mmHg, lactate 7.1 mmol/L. What is the next nursing action?
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CP. A caregiver says, “I can’t keep up with everything; I feel like I’m failing.” What is the nurse’s best response?
Systems thinking requires recognizing caregiver stress and providing support.
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CQ. A patient with Addison’s disease arrives with severe hypotension, Na⁺ 116 mEq/L, K⁺ 7.3 mEq/L, and confusion. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
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CR. A patient with myxedema coma is admitted with hypothermia, bradycardia, and altered mental status. What is the priority nursing intervention?
Myxedema coma requires IV thyroid hormone replacement and careful rewarming.
97 / 125
CS. A patient with severe pneumonia on mechanical ventilation has PaO₂ 46 mmHg despite FiO₂ 100% and PEEP 18 cmH₂O. Plateau pressure is 28 cmH₂O. What is the next nursing action?
98 / 125
CT. A patient says, “I don’t understand why I need this new heart medication.” What is the nurse’s best response?
Patient education promotes understanding and adherence.
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CU. A patient with myxedema coma presents with hypothermia, bradycardia, and altered mental status. What is the priority nursing intervention?
Myxedema coma requires IV thyroid hormone and cautious rewarming.
100 / 125
CV. A trauma patient with a femur fracture reports severe pain unrelieved by opioids, pallor, and paresthesia. Pain worsens with passive stretch. What is the priority nursing action?
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CW. A patient with septic shock remains hypotensive despite 30 mL/kg fluids and norepinephrine infusion. MAP 54 mmHg, lactate 7.1 mmol/L. What is the next nursing action?
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CX. A patient’s family is loudly arguing about whether to continue treatment. What is the nurse’s best action?
Oops! Revisit the nurse’s role in mediating ethical decisions.
Nurses promote ethical decision-making by encouraging structured communication.
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CY. A patient with septic shock remains hypotensive despite 30 mL/kg IV fluids and norepinephrine. MAP 54 mmHg, lactate 6.9 mmol/L. What is the next nursing action?
104 / 125
CZ. A patient with cirrhosis presents with hematemesis. Despite octreotide infusion and endoscopic therapy, bleeding persists. BP is 78/42 mmHg. What is the next nursing action?
Balloon tamponade is a rescue therapy for variceal bleeding not controlled by standard measures.
105 / 125
DA. A patient with cirrhosis presents with massive hematemesis. Despite octreotide infusion, bleeding continues. BP is 82/42 mmHg. What is the next nursing action?
106 / 125
DB. A patient with septic shock remains hypotensive despite 30 mL/kg IV fluids and norepinephrine infusion. MAP 54 mmHg, lactate 7.1 mmol/L. What is the next nursing action?
107 / 125
DC. A patient with anterior MI develops acute pulmonary edema, hypotension, and a new systolic murmur at the apex. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
108 / 125
DD. A patient with anterior MI develops acute pulmonary edema, hypotension, and a new systolic murmur at the apex. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
109 / 125
DE. A patient with anterior MI develops sudden hypotension, pulmonary edema, and a new loud systolic murmur. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
110 / 125
DF. A nurse observes a provider preparing to perform a lumbar puncture without explaining the procedure. What is the priority nursing action?
Advocacy requires ensuring informed consent before procedures to protect patient rights.
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DG. A patient with terminal cancer states, “I don’t want any more chemotherapy.” What should the nurse do first?
Oops! Revisit the nurse’s advocacy role in end-of-life decisions.
Advocacy requires respecting patient autonomy and promptly informing the team.
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DH. A patient with end-stage renal disease presents with potassium 7.8 mEq/L and ECG showing wide QRS complexes. Calcium gluconate has been given. What is the next nursing action?
113 / 125
DI. A patient with end-stage renal disease presents with K⁺ 7.9 mEq/L and muscle weakness. ECG shows wide QRS complexes. Calcium gluconate has been given. What is the next nursing action?
114 / 125
DJ. A nurse sees a provider obtaining consent from a sedated patient. What is the priority nursing action?
Oops! Revisit the nurse’s advocacy role in ensuring valid consent.
Advocacy requires ensuring informed consent is valid and obtained when the patient has decision-making capacity.
115 / 125
DK. A patient with end-stage renal disease presents with K⁺ 7.7 mEq/L and muscle weakness. ECG shows wide QRS complexes. Calcium gluconate was administered. What is the next nursing action?
116 / 125
DL. A patient with traumatic brain injury develops bradycardia, hypertension, and irregular respirations. ICP monitor shows 46 mmHg. What is the priority nursing intervention?
117 / 125
DM. A patient with multiple long-bone fractures suddenly develops confusion, dyspnea, and petechiae on the chest. SpO₂ 74% despite oxygen. What is the next nursing action?
118 / 125
DN. A patient with Addison’s disease arrives with severe hypotension, Na⁺ 116 mEq/L, K⁺ 7.2 mEq/L, and confusion. What is the immediate nursing intervention?
119 / 125
DO. A patient with multiple long-bone fractures suddenly develops confusion, dyspnea, and petechial rash. SpO₂ 74% despite oxygen therapy. What is the immediate nursing action?
120 / 125
DP. A patient with severe asthma exacerbation suddenly becomes silent on auscultation. SpO₂ 79% despite high-flow oxygen. What is the next nursing intervention?
A silent chest indicates impending respiratory failure requiring intubation.
121 / 125
DQ. A patient with limited English proficiency is admitted for emergency surgery. What is the nurse’s best action?
Oops! Revisit guidelines for communicating with LEP patients in emergencies.
Cultural sensitivity and patient rights require professional interpreter services for accurate communication.
122 / 125
DR. A patient with anterior MI develops acute pulmonary edema, hypotension, and a new systolic murmur at the apex. What is the nurse’s immediate action?
123 / 125
DS. In the ICU, two critically ill patients require the same type of specialized equipment, but only one is available. What is the nurse’s best action?
Oops! Revisit the principles of ethical resource allocation.
Systems thinking requires collaborative, ethical decision-making when resources are limited.
124 / 125
DT. A patient recovering from a myocardial infarction says, “I’m terrified this will happen again.” What is the nurse’s best response?
Oops! Revisit principles of therapeutic communication.
Open-ended communication validates the patient’s fears and opens the door to tailored teaching.
125 / 125
DU. A patient with end-stage renal disease presents with K⁺ 7.8 mEq/L and ECG showing wide QRS complexes. Calcium gluconate has been given. What is the next nursing action?
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