Chapter 17 - Assessing Ears
A nurse is interviewing a client as part of a routine examination of his ears and hearing. The nurse notes that this client has high blood pressure. Which of the following questions regarding his hearing should the nurse ask that is associated with his high blood pressure?
"Do you experience any ringing, roaring, or crackling in your ears?"
A client presents with otalgia and yellow-green discharge from the external ear canal. Which question should the nurse ask to determine the cause of this problem?
"Have you had any recent trauma to the inside of your ear?"
The client asks the nurse why the nurse put the tuning fork on the bone behind the ear. Which is the best response by the nurse?
"It identifies a problem with the normal pathways for sound to travel to your inner ear."
An adult client tells the nurse that his 80-year-old father is almost completely deaf. After an explanation to the client about risk factors for hearing loss, the nurse determines that the client needs further instruction when the client says
"It is difficult to prevent hearing loss or worsening of hearing."
The mother of a small child with tubes in both eardrums asks the nurse if it is okay if the child travels by airplane. What is the nurse's best response?
"It's safe to fly because the tubes will equalize pressure."
A client calls the clinic and tells the nurse that the doctor told her that she has "otalgia." The client cannot remember what the doctor explained this to be. How would the nurse most appropriately respond?
"Otalgia is pain in the ear."
The results of a client's Rinne test are as follows: bone conduction > air conduction. How should the nurse explain these findings to the client?
"You have a conductive hearing loss."
During an assessment of an older adult client, the client states they have noticed changes in their hearing. The nurse expects to find what normal age-related changes? Select all that apply.
- gradual sensorineural hearing loss - increased soft cerumen and decreased cilia - atrophy of the tympanic membrane making landmarks more visible
A registered nurse is working with a nurse practitioner at a local walk-in clinic. The nurse practitioner needs to perform an objective assessment of a client's left ear. What equipment would the RN make sure is in the room? Select all that apply.
- high-pitched tuning fork - otoscope
When providing client education on hearing, the nurse should remind clients to utilize ear plugs when they are what? (Select all that apply.)
- train stations - using lawnmowers - at concerts
The nurse notes a tophus of the ear of an older adult. Which assessment data is consistent with a tophus?
A hard nodule composed of uric acid crystals
You are teaching a class on diseases of the ear. What would you teach the class is the most characteristic symptom of otosclerosis?
A progressive, bilateral loss of hearing
A client has Darwin tubercle. What is this?
A small painless nodule on the helix
A 55-year-old male client has just been diagnosed with presbycusis. In the interview with the client, the nurse should most expect the client to complain of having trouble hearing which of the following in the initial stages of this condition?
A story his wife is telling him
A mother of a small child calls the clinic and asks to schedule an appointment for ear tube removal. The call is transferred to the nurse. What is the nurse's best action?
Ask the mother how long the tubes have been in place.
Upon inspection of an elderly client's ears using an otoscope, the nurse observes a cloudy appearance to the tympanic membranes with prominent landmarks. What action should the nurse perform first?
Ask whether the client is experiencing ear pain or pressure
High doses of this medication can produce bilateral tinnitus?
Aspirin
A nurse is inspecting the ears of an Asian client and observes that her earlobes appear soldered, or tightly attached to adjacent skin with no apparent lobe. Which of the following should the nurse do next?
Continue with the examination
A nurse is educating a client about the function of the parts of the auditory system. Which is the function of the eustachian tube?
Equalizes the pressure in the middle ear with atmospheric pressure
The nursing student hopefuls are taking a pre-nursing anatomy and physiology class. What will they learn is the anatomical feature that equalizes air pressure in the middle ear?
Eustachian tube
A client visits a community clinic reporting severe allergies causing a "crackling sensation" in the ear. The physician diagnoses serous otitis media. Which of the following is a characteristic of this condition?
Fluid collects in the middle ear causing an obstruction of the auditory tube.
The nurse assesses the client as shown. What should the nurse suspect is occurring with this client?
Gout
A six-month old male infant is brought to the emergency department by his parents for inconsolable crying and pulling at his right ear. When assessing this infant the nurse is aware that the tympanic membrane should be what color in a healthy ear?
Gray
When inspecting the tympanic membrane, which of the following structures does the nurse expect to identify?
Handle of malleus, short process of malleus, cone of light
The eustachian tube is a passage between the middle ear and the nasopharynx. What is the function of the eustachian tube?
Helps to regulate pressure in the middle ear
When providing client teaching about the ears, what should the nurse be sure to include?
How the client cleans the ears
Which of the following is a priority client teaching topic related to the ears?
How to prevent skin cancer
When teaching a class of school-age children about hygiene, the nurse should include which information about the ears?
Never put anything smaller than your elbow in your ears
The nurse palpates a client's auricles and notes an enlarged lymph node on one ear. No redness is observed, and the client denies pain or tenderness. What is the nurse's best action?
Notify the healthcare provider about the finding
A client comes to the clinic and reports pain when he touches his ear. With what is this finding most consistent?
Otitis externa
Which of the following describes a condition characterized by abnormal spongy bone formation around the stapes?
Otosclerosis
You are a pediatric nurse caring for a child who has been brought to the clinic with otitis externa. What assessment finding is characteristic of otitis externa?
Pain on manipulation of the auricle
A client has been diagnosed with conductive hearing loss. The nurse understands that which of the following could be the cause of this type of hearing loss?
Perforated eardrum
Which precaution should a nurse take to ensure the safety of a client when performing the Romberg test?
Place arms around the client without touching
An adult farm worker presents at the ED after falling out of a hay loft. The client states falling approximately 4 hours ago and did not lose consciousness. The client is experiencing only a mild headache. When asked why the client came to the ED, the client states that he had a clear discharge from the right ear ever since the accident. What should this finding indicate to the nurse?
Possible basilar skull fracture
The nurse is assessing the hearing of an older adult. Which type of hearing problem might the nurse expect to find in the older adult?
Presbycusis
Which terms refers to the progressive hearing loss associated with aging?
Presbycusis
The nurse notes otitis media with effusion in the left ear of a 3-year-old child. Which assessment data is consistent with otitis media with effusion?
Redness and bulging of the eardrum
After conducting a health history, the nurse decides to perform the assessment shown. What finding did the nurse use to make this clinical determination?
Reduced hearing in one ear
Which of the following tests use a tuning fork between two positions to assess hearing?
Rinne
A client presents at the clinic complaining of a loss of balance. What test should the nurse expect the physician to carry out on a client with a loss of balance?
Romberg test
When assessing the tympanic membrane, a variation of normal is a tympanic membrane with what?
Sclerosis
The nurse is presenting an educational event for gardeners. When discussing the ears, what would be an important topic to cover?
Skin cancer prevention
A nurse is admitting a client to the hospital. When reviewing the client's medical record, the nurse notes that this client had abnormal findings during the Weber test. What would the nurse know this means?
The client has unilateral hearing loss
A nurse is assessing a client's tympanic membrane. The nurse suspects that the client may have otitis media. Which of the following findings would confirm this suspicion?
The membrane does not flutter upon pneumatic otoscopy with a bulb insufflator
Which action by the nurse is consistent with Weber's test?
The nurse activates the tuning fork and places it on the midline of the parietal bone in line with both ears.
Which action by the nurse is consistent with the Rinne test?
The nurse strikes the tuning fork and places it on the client's mastoid process to measure bone conduction.
A nurse practitioner is assessing the tympanic membrane of a client who has come to the clinic. What would the nurse practitioner expect to visualize if the client has a normal otoscopic evaluation?
The short process of the malleus
Which of the following findings from the health history of a 70-year-old woman with tinnitus is likely most significant to her diagnosis?
The woman takes aspirin 4 times daily to treat her rheumatoid arthritis.
A client diagnosed with arthritis has been taking aspirin and now reports experiencing adverse effects. What adverse effect indicates that a decrease in dose may be necessary?
Tinnitus
A nurse performs an initial examination of a client brought to the emergency department after sustaining a head injury in an automobile accident. Which characteristic of discharge from the ears should alert the nurse that the client has a cerebrospinal fluid leak?
Watery or bloody
The nurse assessing for unilateral hearing loss by using a tuning fork. What test is the nurse performing?
Weber's test
After examining the client's tympanic membranes, the nurse documents "Right tympanic membrane, red and bulging with no light reflex." The nurse recognizes that these are signs of
acute otitis media.
The nurse has performed the Rinne test on an older adult client. After the test, the client reports that her bone conduction sound was heard longer than the air conduction sound. The nurse determines that the client is most likely experiencing
conductive hearing loss
In the hearing pathway, hair cells of the spiral organ of Corti are stimulated by movement of
fluid
While assessing the ears of an adult client, the nurse observes that the tympanic membrane is completely immobile. The nurse should further assess the client for signs and symptoms of
infection.
The nurse is planning to perform an ear examination on an adult client. After explaining the procedures to the client, the nurse should
observe the client's response to the explanations.
During the focused assessment, the client experiences pain when the nurse manipulates (wiggles) the pinna of the ear. Based on these findings, the nurse suspects the client may be experiencing which of the following disorders?
otitis externa
The nurse is planning to conduct the Weber test on an adult male client. To perform this test, the nurse should plan to
strike a tuning fork and place it on the center of the client's head or forehead.
An adult client visits the clinic and complains of tinnitus. The nurse should ask the client if she has been
taking antibiotics.
A client diagnosed with otosclerosis is able to hear bone conduction longer than air conduction when the Rinne test is performed. How should the nurse classify this client's hearing?
unilateral conductive hearing loss
A 30-year-old client arrives at the community healthcare center complaining of dizziness and a feeling of the room spinning. Based on the client's symptoms, which condition best describes what the client most likely experiencing?
vertigo
A nurse performs a hearing test on an elderly client. Which result should the nurse recognize as an indication that presbycusis is present? An inability to hear:
whispered sounds