EXAM 4 : Chapter 40 (Nursing Assessment: Musculoskeletal Function)

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The nurse is conducting the admission assessment for a client who is to undergo an arthrogram. What is the priority question the nurse should ask?

"Do you have any allergies?"

A client undergoes an arthroscopy at the outpatient clinic. After the procedure, the nurse provides discharge teaching. Which response by the client indicates the need for further teaching?

"I should use my heating pad this evening to reduce some of the pain in my knee."

A 22-year-old college basketball player is undergoing diagnostic testing following a knee injury, and his primary care provider has ordered arthrography. What teaching should the nurse provide in preparation for this procedure?

"The doctor will inject some contrast solution into your joint and take a series of X-rays."

The nurse is assessing a client with a musculoskeletal system condition. Which statement indicates to the nurse that the client is experiencing bone pain?

"The pain feels deep in my legs and keeps me awake at night."

The older client asks the nurse how best to maintain strong bones. What is the nurse's best response?

"Weight-bearing exercises can strengthen bones."

The older client asks the nurse how best to maintain strong muscles. What is the nurse's best response?

"Weight-resistance exercises can strengthen muscles."

The nurse is preparing the client for computed tomography. Which information should be given by the nurse?

"You must remain very still during the procedure."

A patient tells the nurse, "I was working out and lifting weights and now that I have stopped, I am flabby and my muscles have gone!" What is the best response by the nurse?

"Your muscles were in a state of hypertrophy from the weight lifting but it will persist only if the exercise is continued."

Which statement describes paresthesia?

Abnormal sensations

Which body movement involves moving toward the midline?

Adduction

The nurse is providing care to a client following a knee arthroscopy. What would the nurse expect to include in the client's plan of care?

Administering the prescribed analgesic.

The primary functions of cartilage are to reduce friction between articular surfaces, absorb shocks, and reduce stress on joint surfaces. Where in the human body is cartilage found?

All options are correct between ribs elbow joint between vertebraes

A client arrives at the orthopedic physician's office stating knee pain sustained while playing soccer. A history and physical assessment is completed. The knee appears reddened with edema. Which other diagnostic testing would the nurse anticipate?

An arthroscopy

A client is experiencing muscle weakness in the upper extremities. The client raises an arm above the head but then loses the ability to maintain the position. Muscular dystrophy is suspected. Which diagnostic test would evaluate muscle weakness or deterioration?

An electromyography

Which nursing action is most important in caring for the client following an arthrogram?

Apply ice to the joint.

A patient is scheduled for a procedure that will allow the physician to visualize the knee joint in order to diagnose the patient's pain. What procedure will the nurse prepare the patient for?

Arthroscopy

The nurse is performing a neurological assessment. What will this assessment include?

Ask the client to plantar flex the toes.

Which hormone inhibits bone reabsorption and increases calcium deposit in the bone?

Calcitonin

The orthopedic nurse is caring for a client diagnosed with a fracture of the radius. In which type of bone tissue does the nurse anticipate the fracture being?

Cancellous

The nurse is caring for a pregnant patient with pregnancy-induced hypertension. When assessing the reflexes in the ankle, the nurse observes rhythmic contractions of the muscle when dorsiflexing the foot. What would the nurse document this finding as?

Clonus

What is the term for a rhythmic contraction of a muscle?

Clonus

Which is a neurovascular problem caused by pressure within a muscle area that increases to such an extent that microcirculation diminishes?

Compartment syndrome

Choose the correct statement about the endosteum, a significant component of the skeletal system:

Covers the marrow cavity of long bones

Which term refers to a grating or crackling sound or sensation?

Crepitus

Which of the following biologically active vitamin functions to increase the amount of calcium in the blood?

D

The homecare nurse is evaluating the musculoskeletal system of a geriatric client whose previous assessment was within normal limits. The nurse initiates a call to the health care provider and/or emergency services when which change is found?

Decreased right-sided muscle strength

The nurse is educating a group of students about peroneal nerve damage. The nurse knows that which assessment will show this type of nerve damage?

Dorsiflexion of the foot and extension of the toes

The nurse is performing a neurovascular assessment of a client's injured extremity. Which would the nurse report?

Dusky or mottled skin color

A client is diagnosed with a fracture of a diarthrosis joint. What is an example of this type of joint?

Elbow A diarthrosis joint, like the elbow, is freely movable. The skull is an example of an immovable joint. The vertebral joints and symphysis pubis are amphiarthrosis joints that have limited motion.

Which of the following describes a muscle that is limp and without tone?

Flaccid

The human body is designed to protect its vital parts. The nurse is aware that a fracture of what type of bone may interfere with the protection of vital organs?

Flat bones

The nurse is preparing to perform a musculoskeletal assessment for a client with chronic muscle pain. Which assessment technique would be an appropriate tool to evaluate this type of pain?

Flex the bicep against resistance.

A nurse understands the influence of hormones on bone maintenance. Therefore, the nurse knows that a patient on long-term cortisol may experience:

Increased bone resorption.

Which assessment finding would cause the nurse to suspect compartment syndrome in the client following a bone biopsy?

Increased diameter of the calf

A child has fallen off a swing on a playground and sustained a greenstick (partial) fracture of his radius. Because the child is otherwise healthy, healing has begun promptly after his injury. Which of the following is the first stage of bone healing?

Inflammation and hematoma formation **Although the exact process of fracture healing is debated, stages of bone healing follow a sequence of hematoma and inflammation, angiogenesis and cartilage formation, cartilage calcification, cartilage removal, bone formation, and remodeling.

A client is exhibiting diminished range of motion, loss of flexibility, stiffness, and loss of height. The history and physical findings are associated with age-related changes of which area?

Joints

Which of the following is an example of a hinge joint?

Knee

Which of the following is the most common site of joint effusion?

Knee

An elderly patient has come to the clinic for a regular check-up. While reviewing a patient's history, the nurse notes that the patient has an increased thoracic curvature of the spine. What term describes this assessment finding?

Kyphosis

The nurse is performing an assessment on an older adult patient and observes the patient has an increased forward curvature of the thoracic spine. What does the nurse understand this common finding is known as?

Kyphosis

Place an "X" on the figure where the nurse would assess for kyphosis.

Kyphosis is an increased convexity of roundness of the thoracic curve of the spine.

Which of the following deformity causes a exaggerated curvature of the lumbar spine?

Lordosis

The nurse is employed at a long-term care facility caring for geriatric clients. Which assessment finding is characteristic of an age-related change?

Loss of height

The nurse is caring for a client who has a deficiency in the formation of cartilage in joints. Which essential substance is absent?

Matrix

The nurse is preparing to assess the spine of an older adult. Which actions will the nurse take during this assessment? Select all that apply.

Measure height Ask the client to bend backward Ask the client to bend forward at the waist

The nurse is working on an orthopedic floor caring for a client injured in a football game. The nurse is reviewing the client's chart noting that the client has previously had an injured tendon. The nurse anticipates an injury between the periosteum of the bone and which of the following?

Muscle

A client scheduled to undergo an electromyography asks the nurse what this test will evaluate. What is the correct response from the nurse?

Muscle weakness

A nurse is caring for a client with an undiagnosed bone disease. When instructing on the normal process to maintain bone tissue, which process transforms osteoblasts into mature bone cells?

Ossification and calcification

An instructor is describing the process of bone development. Which of the following would the instructor describe as being responsible for the process of ossification?

Osteoblasts

Which serum level indicates the rate of bone turnover?

Osteocalcin

A nurse is aware that the strength and integrity of an individual's bones is dependent on a delicate balance between bone formation and bone resorption. Bone resorption is a primary function of:

Osteoclasts

Which cells are involved in bone resorption?

Osteoclasts

An emergency department nurse is assessing an 80-year-old patient who has presented with a complaint of abdominal pain. The nurse performs a rapid inspection of the patient and notes multiple significant findings, including kyphosis. The nurse should understand that this assessment finding is suggestive of what musculoskeletal disease?

Osteoporosis

The nurse is performing an assessment for a patient who may have peripheral neurovascular dysfunction. What signs does the patient present with that indicate circulation is impaired? (Select all that apply.)

Pale, cyanotic, or mottled color Cool temperature of the extremity More than 3-second capillary refill

A patient comes to the clinic and informs the nurse of numbness, tingling, and a burning sensation in the arm from the elbow down to the fingers. What type of symptom would this be documented as?

Paresthesia

Which nerve is being assessed when the nurses asks the client to dorsiflex the ankle and extend the toes?

Peroneal

Red bone marrow produces which of the following? Select all that apply.

Platelets White blood cells (WBCs) Red blood cells (RBCs)

Red bone marrow produces which of the following? Select all that apply.

Platelets White blood cells (WBCs) Red blood cells (RBCs)

A 10-year-old boy who was brought to the emergency room after a skiing accident is diagnosed with a fracture of the distal end of the femur. Why is this type of fracture significant?

Potential growth problems may result from damage to the epiphyseal plate.

Parathormone regulates the concentration of calcium in the blood by:

Promoting the movement of calcium from the bone.

The nurse is caring for a client who experienced a crushing injury of the lower extremities. Which of the following symptoms is essential to be reported to the physician?

Pulselessness

A client has just undergone arthrography. What is the most important instruction for the nurse to include in the teaching plan?

Report joint crackling or clicking noises occurring after the second day.

Which of the following is an appropriate priority nursing diagnosis for the client following an arthrocentesis?

Risk for infection

A client has a fracture that is being treated with open rigid compression plate fixation devices. What teaching will the nurse reinforce to the client about how the progress of bone healing will be monitored?

Serial x-rays will be taken.

A nurse practitioner assesses a patient's movement in his left hand after a cast is removed. The nurse asks the patient to turn his wrist so the palm of his hand is facing up. This movement is known as:

Supination.

Skull sutures are an example of which type of joint?

Synarthrosis

Skull sutures are an example of which type of joint?

Synarthrosis Skull sutures are considered synarthrosis joints and are immovable. Amphiarthrosis joints allow limited movement, such as a vertebral joint. Diarthrosis joints are freely movable joints such as the hip and shoulder.

The nurse working in the orthopedic surgeon's office is asked to schedule a shoulder arthrography. The nurse determines that the surgeon suspects which finding?

Tear in the joint capsule

A client is seen in the emergency room for a knee injury that happened during a basketball game. Diagnostic tests reveal torn cords of fibrous connective tissue that connect muscles to bones. What type of tear has this client sustained?

Tendon

The nurse is providing care for a male patient who has undergone knee arthroplasty. As part of the nurse's morning assessment, the nurse is assessing for peripheral neurovascular dysfunction distal to the surgical site. When performing this assessment, what parameters should the nurse assess and document? Select all that apply.

The color of the patient's lower leg and foot The patient's ability to move his foot The patient's sensation in his foot and lower leg The temperature of the patient's foot and lower leg

An older adult patient has been admitted to a subacute geriatric medicine unit with a diagnosis of failure to thrive. The nurse is conducting a comprehensive assessment that focuses on the patient's musculoskeletal system. During this assessment, what will be the nurse's primary focus?

The patient's level of function and activities of daily living

A patient has just had an arthroscopy. What is a nursing intervention that is necessary for the nurse to implement following an arthroscopy?

Wrap the joint in compression dressing.

The nurse is performing a musculoskeletal assessment of a client in a nursing home who had a stroke 2 years ago and who has right-sided hemiplegia. The nurse notes that the girth of the client's right calf is 2 inches less in diameter than the left calf. The nurse attributes the decreased girth to

atrophy of right calf muscle.

A client tells the health care provider about shoulder pain that is present even without any strenuous movement. The health care provider identifies a sac filled with synovial fluid. What condition will the nurse educate the client about?

bursitis

Fracture healing occurs in four areas, including the

external soft tissue.

There are thousands of components of the musculoskeletal system that facilitate mobility and independent function. The function of skeletal muscle is promoting:

movement of skeletal bones.

Each bone is composed of cells, protein matrix, and mineral deposits. Which type of bone cell works to repair a bone fracture?

osteocytes

A nurse knows that a person with a 3-week-old femur fracture is at the stage where angiogenesis is occurring. What are the characteristics of this stage?

New capillaries producing a bridge between the fractured bones.

The nurse is taking an initial history of a new client with a musculoskeletal problem. Which factor is most important for the nurse to keep in mind for this assessment?

Any chronic disorder or recent injury

After a bone density test, an older adult female client tells the nurse, "I don't understand why I have osteoporosis because I eat well and take my calcium." What does the nurse explain as the reason that the client may have osteoporosis?

The loss is from withdrawal of estrogen and a decrease in activity levels.

The emergency room nurse is reporting the location of a fracture to the client's primary care physician. When stating the location of the fracture on the long shaft of the femur, the nurse would be most correct to state which terminology locating the fractured site?

The fracture is on the diaphysis.


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