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UWorld Nclex General Critical Thinking and Rationales

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UWorld Nclex General Critical Thinking and Rationales

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  • January 14, 2024
  • 16
  • 2023/2024
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lOMoARcPSD|17224140




Injury Patterns in Nonaccidental Trauma Signs of Abuse:
- long bone fractures in humerus or femur - Shaken baby syndrome
- linear type immersion burns - Burns in the shape of household items
- frenulum tears & gingival lesions - Repeated injuries in varied stages of healing
- subdural & epidural hematomas - lapsed time between injury and time when care is
sought
- retinal hemorrhage on funduscopic exam - Inconsistency between injury & caregiver’s explanation
Room Assignments
When preparing room assignments, the nurse should not place a client who has a fresh surgical wound or is
immunocompromised in a room with a client who has an active or suspected infection.

Suicide
Clients who articulate long-term personal goals and family milestones are less likely to commit suicide.

Bone Healing
Bone healing depends on multiple factors, including nutrition, adequate circulation, and age. A client
with peripheral arterial disease has decreased perfusion to the extremities due to atherosclerotic changes in
the arteries. Without adequate perfusion, the bone is not supplied with the oxygen and nutrients required for
healing.

Pressure Injuries

• Stage 1: Intact skin with nonblanchable redness
• Stage 2: Partial-thickness skin loss (abrasion, blister, or shallow crater) involving the dermis or
epidermis; the wound bed is red or pink and may be shiny or dry
• Stage 3: Full-thickness skin loss; subcutaneous fat is visible but not tendon, muscle, or bone;
tunneling may be present
• Stage 4: Full-thickness skin loss with visible tendon, muscle, or bone; slough or eschar (scabbing,
dead tissue) may be present; undermining and tunneling may be present
• Pressure injuries are described as "unstageable" if the base is covered by necrotic tissue or eschar

Drawing Insulin
NPH insulin and regular insulin may be safely mixed and administered as a single injection. Regular insulin
should be drawn into the syringe before intermediate-acting insulin to avoid cross-contaminating multidose
vials (mnemonic – RN: Regular before NPH)

1. Inject 25 units of air into the NPH insulin vial without inverting the vial or passing the needle into
the solution.
2. Inject 12 units of air into the regular insulin vial and withdraw the dose, leaving no air bubbles.
3. Draw 25 units of NPH insulin, totaling 37 units in one syringe. Any overdraw of NPH into the
syringe will necessitate wasting the entire quantity.

Transplant
During a heart transplant, the donor heart is cut off from the autonomic nervous system (denervated), which
alters the heart rate during rest and exercise after the transplant. The transplanted heart is expected to be
tachycardic (eg, 90-110/min).

Cardiac
Percutaneous coronary intervention via the femoral approach places the client at increased risk for
retroperitoneal hemorrhage, which is exacerbated by anticoagulants. Back pain, hypotension, flank
ecchymosis (Grey-Turner sign), hematoma formation, and diminished distal pulses can be early signs of
bleeding into the retroperitoneal space and require immediate intervention.

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MI:
The nurse should rapidly assess (eg, vital signs, heart and lung sounds, pain) and intervene (eg, 2 large-bore
IV lines, oxygen, aspirin, nitroglycerin, morphine) for the client with acute chest pain. Upright positioning
improves ventilation and reduces pressure on the heart. The nurse should obtain a 12-lead ECG, chest x-ray,
and blood work (eg, cardiac markers), and place the client on continuous cardiac monitoring.

Sickle Cell Amemia
The priority intervention is the administration of IV fluids to reduce blood viscosity and restore perfusion
to the areas previously affected by vasoocclusion. Only after IV rehydration reverses vasoocclusion can
nonsickled RBCs effectively carry supplemental oxygen to the tissues.

Organ Donation
A deceased client who is registered as an organ donor does not need familial consent for organ procurement
to proceed. Organ donation does not delay or interfere with funeral arrangements or leave obvious evidence
on the body; deceased clients can still be displayed according to their wishes, including open casket funeral
services.

Pediatrics
A client with signs of basilar skull fracture (eg, periorbital hematomas, bruising behind the ear, leakage of
cerebrospinal fluid) requires immediate cervical spine immobilization, neurologic assessment, and airway,
breathing, and circulation support. Because of their close proximity to the brainstem, basilar skull
fractures pose a risk of serious intracranial injury, which is the most common cause of traumatic death in
children.

TPN
- Total parenteral nutrition (intravenous nutrition) is high in glucose, which places the client at risk for
hyperglycemia. Signs and symptoms of hyperglycemia include polydipsia, polyuria, headaches, and
blurred vision.
- The steps for administering an intermittent enteral feeding include identifying the client, elevating the head
of the bed 30-45 degrees, validating tube placement, assessing bowel function, returning aspirated residual
contents to the stomach, flushing before and after feeding with 30 mL of water, and slowly administering
prescribed feedings at room temperature (too fast or too cold will cause cramping).

Disaster Triage

• Immediate (red tag): Life-threatening injuries with good prognoses once treated (eg, airway
obstruction, open fractures, second- or third-degree burns covering 15%-40% body surface area)
• Delayed (yellow tag): Injuries requiring treatment within hours (eg, stable abdominal wounds, soft
tissue injuries)
• Minimal (green tag): Injuries requiring treatment within a few days (eg, minor burns or fractures,
small lacerations)
• Expectant (black tag): Extensive injuries, poor prognosis regardless of treatment

- Disaster triage ranks the likelihood of survival with treatment, not necessarily the severity of injury.
Clients with significant alteration in airway, breathing, and circulation who are likely to survive with
timely intervention are the first priority.

Fall Risk
- Keeping the lights dim increases the risk for falls, particularly when the client is in an unfamiliar
environment. A well-lit room promotes orientation and helps the client avoid obstacles during
ambulation.
- Keep bedside commode next to bed to help prevent falls.

Blood Products

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- Blood products should not be left at room temperature for >30 minutes before a transfusion is started.
Leaving blood out at room temperature for a prolonged period increases the likelihood of bacterial growth.
If the start of the transfusion is delayed, the blood should be returned to the blood bank, where it can be
refrigerated at a precise temperature.
- Blood products should not be placed in the unit refrigerator as the temperature cannot be precisely
regulated.
- Blood products should be transfused within 4 hours of removal from refrigeration.
- Transfusions should not be interrupted after initiation except in cases of transfusion-related reactions or
fluid overload. In addition, interrupting and restarting transfusions increases the risk for infection.

Urosepsis
Urosepsis is a type of bloodstream infection that originates from the urinary tract. A uroseptic client with
chronic kidney disease and hyperkalemia should be treated with IV isotonic fluid boluses and IV
broadspectrum antibiotics. Blood and urine cultures should be obtained. The nurse would question the
administration of iodinated contrast to a client with significant kidney disease. ACE inhibitors and
angiotensin II receptor blockers should be avoided in clients with hyperkalemia because they impair the
excretion of excess potassium and can potentiate hyperkalemia, which can lead to life-threatening
arrhythmias (eg, ventricular fibrillation).

Ostomy
- Peristomal skin irritation may also occur if the ostomy appliance is removed and changed too frequently.
The appliance should be changed every 5-10 days.
- The ostomy bag is emptied when it becomes one-third full. Leaking and skin irritation may occur if the
appliance becomes too heavy and pulls away from the skin.
- The client with a colostomy has few dietary restrictions, but the client may be encouraged to decrease
intake of odorous and gas-forming foods (eg, beans, onions, broccoli).

Pre-Eclampsia
- multisystem disorder that occurs after the 20th week of pregnancy.
- Preeclampsia is defined as new-onset hypertension (≥140/90 mm Hg) plus proteinuria and/or signs of
endorgan damage after 20 weeks gestation. Although edema is not a diagnostic criterion for preeclampsia,
it is a common manifestation of the disease process.
- Clients with preeclampsia are at risk for developing preeclampsia-associated seizure activity as a result of
increased central nervous system irritability. The presence of neurologic manifestations (eg,
hyperreflexia, clonus) may indicate worsening preeclampsia and can precede seizure activity. (clonus =
the nurse firmly dorsiflexes the foot with 1 hand while supporting the leg and ankle with the other hand.
The abnormal finding of positive clonus is identified when rhythmic, jerking "beats" of the foot are
present as the foot is released and allowed to fall back into plantar flexion.)
Scope of Practice
RN LPN/LVN UAP
- Clinical assessment - Monitoring RN findings - Activities of daily living
- Initial client education - Reinforcing education - Hygiene
- Discharge education - Routine procedures (catheterization) - Linen change
- Clinical judgement - Most medication administrations - Routine, stable vital signs
- Initiating blood transfusion - Ostomy care - Documenting input/output
- Tube patency & enteral feeding - Positioning
- Specific assessments *
* Limited assessments (i.e. lung sounds, bowel sounds, neurovascular checks)
Autism
Children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) respond well to brief, concrete, and developmentally
appropriate communication. The nurse can ease anxiety during procedures by involving caregivers and
reducing stimulation. Physical touch and eye contact may activate a stress response in children with ASD.

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