Pharmacology Prep U Chapter 51: Diuretic Agents

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After teaching a patient about the action of spironolactone, the nurse determines that the teaching was successful when the patient states:

"I need to make sure I don't eat too many high potassium foods."

A client is receiving hydrochlorothiazide. The nurse would expect this drug to begin acting within which time frame?

2 hours

A client has edema of the lower extremities and abdomen. What is the reason to administer a stronger diuretic than a thiazide diuretic to this client?

A thiazide diuretic will be ineffective when immediate diuresis is needed.

A nurse is caring for a client with acute renal failure. The health care provider has prescribed a diuretic therapy for the client to promote dieresis. What intervention should the nurse perform to prevent the inconvenience caused by increased urination?

Administer the drug early in the day.

The nurse is caring for a 53-year-old man with a 30-year history of alcohol dependency. He presents with ascites, secondary to cirrhosis. Which mechanism is involved in his fluid shift?

Decreased plasma oncotic pressure

The nurse is caring for a client who is experiencing elevated intracranial pressure following neurosurgery. The health care provider orders an osmotic diuretic to reduce pressure. Which medication would the nurse expect to be ordered?

Mannitol

A 49-year-old client reports frequent muscle cramps while on hydrochlorothiazide therapy. The nurse would advise the client to do which?

eat potassium-rich foods.

A health care provider has prescribed triamterene to a male client with renal disease. The client informs the nurse that he is taking potassium supplements to address some heart problems. The nurse would be alert for:

increased risk of hyperkalemia.

What substance is reabsorbed in the ascending limb of the loop of Henle?

sodium

A patient with a longstanding diagnosis of chronic renal failure has experienced a significant decline in urine output in recent days, prompting him to seek care at a local clinic. A nurse at the clinic has suggested to a colleague that the administration of a diuretic such as hydrochlorothiazide may improve the patient's urine output. How should the colleague best respond to this suggestion?

"Actually, patients with renal failure usually can't take hydrochlorothiazide."

The nurse is teaching a 62-year-old client about hydrochlorothiazide, which the health care provider has prescribed for treatment of hypertension. What statement, made by the client, suggests that the client understands the teaching?

"I will need to stand slowly."

Which instruction would be most appropriate for a client who is taking a diuretic?

"It's okay to take it with food."

A client asks, "Why is my prescription is being switched from furosemide to spironolactone?" What is the nurse's best response?

"You will lose less potassium with spironolactone than with furosemide."

A patient has been prescribed a daily dosage of 20 mg of torsemide for the treatment of acute pulmonary edema. The drug is available in the form of 10 mg tablets. How many tablets should the nurse get for the course of 4 days?

8

A client receives a dose of furosemide intravenously at 8:00 AM. The nurse would expect this drug to exert is peak effects at which time?

8:30 AM

A patient receives furosemide intravenously at 9 AM. The nurse would expect to assess peak effects of the drug at which time?

9:30 AM

A nurse is providing patient teaching for a 62-year-old woman who is taking triamterene. The nurse will teach the patient to avoid what in her diet?

Avocados

A 75-year-old client is diagnosed with atrial fibrillation and chronic congestive heart failure. The health care provider orders a combination of digoxin and diuretics to treat the client's diseases. Recent laboratory results indicate that the client's potassium level is 2 mEq/L. This client is at risk for which problem?

Digoxin toxicity

The pharmacology instructor is discussing the various diuretic agents and their sites of action in the nephron. In what part of the nephron do thiazide diuretics act?

Distal tubule

A client is receiving a diuretic and tells the nurse that he has decreased his fluid intake so that he does not have to make so many trips to the bathroom. The nurse realizes the client is at risk for:

Fluid rebound

A client prescribed both an ACE inhibitor and a beta-blocker for the treatment of hypertension has been consistently obtaining blood pressure readings in the vicinity of 145/90 mm Hg. As a result, the client's primary care provider has prescribed furosemide. What order would be most consistent with this client's health needs?

furosemide 40 mg PO BID

After teaching a group of students about loop diuretics, the instructor determines that the teaching has been successful when the students identify which agent as the safest for use in the home?

Furosemide

A male client has cirrhosis and is receiving diuretic therapy. The nurse knows that what drug will help prevent metabolic alkalosis or hypokalemia in this client?

Spironolactone

A nurse is preparing to administer a diuretic that antagonizes the action of aldosterone. Which drug would the nurse be most likely to administer?

Spironolactone

A patient is switched from furosemide (Lasix) to spironolactone (Aldactone). The patient asks the nurse why she has been switched to a new medicine. What is the best answer that will provide patient education regarding the change?

"You will lose less potassium with spironolactone than with furosemide."

An elderly patient with a history of congestive heart failure has been admitted to hospital with failure to thrive and admission blood work reveals a hemoglobin level of 6.9 g/dL. The care team has consequently administered two units of packed red blood cells, but auscultation of the client's lungs now reveals diffuse crackles. Administration of what drug is likely to resolve the patient's pulmonary edema?

Furosemide

A 91-year-old client, who is being prepared for discharge, has been prescribed the diuretic spironolactone. While teaching the client about the drug, what major adverse effect should the nurse be sure to mention?

Hyperkalemia

A client who has been taking hydrochlorothiazide arrives at the clinic for his 1-month follow-up appointment. The client tells the nurse that he feels weaker since he began taking the drug. What should the nurse consider as a possible cause of these symptoms?

Hypokalemia

Upon her visit to the primary care provider's office, a female client presents with 14 pounds of additional weight since her visit 3 weeks ago. Her lower extremities are quite swollen, and her facial features are puffy. The provider prescribes a diuretic and requests a follow-up visit in 3 days. Two days later, the client contacts the office and is so dyspneic that she is hard to understand over the phone. An ambulance is dispatched, and she is admitted to the hospital for rapid diuresing. Which diuretic will most likely be the initial drug of choice?

Loop diuretic

When describing where bumetanide acts, what would the nurse include?

Loop of Henle

A client is diagnosed with increased intracranial pressure. Which would the nurse expect to be ordered?

Mannitol

A 64-year-old patient is admitted to the emergency department with pulmonary edema. The physician orders furosemide 40 mg IV. If the drug is available in a 100 mg/10 mL preparation, how will the nurse administer it?

The nurse will administer 4 mL over 1 to 2 minutes.

A nurse obtains an allergy history from a client based on the understanding that which class is associated with a cross-sensitivity reaction with sulfonamides?

Thiazide diuretics

A nurse understands that loop diuretics are considered high ceiling diuretics because they:

cause a greater diuresis.

Which diuretic will most likely be the initial drug of choice when a client demonstrates dyspnea related to pulmonary edema?

furosemide

A hospital client with a diagnosis of liver failure has been prescribed a low dose of spironolactone in order to treat ascites. The nurse who is providing this client's care should prioritize assessments for the signs and symptoms of what health problem?

hepatic encephalopathy

A health care provider prescribes spironolactone, a potassium-sparing diuretic, for a client with cirrhosis. For which category of clients is the use of potassium-sparing diuretics contraindicated?

hyperkalemia

An older adult client has a complex medical history that includes heart failure, type 1 diabetes, and diabetic nephropathy. The nurse has questioned a care provider's prescription for oral spironolactone because the client's health problems would contribute to a high risk of which adverse reaction?

hyperkalemia

A client is unconscious and experiencing increasing intracranial pressure. What type of diuretic will the client most likely be prescribed?

osmotic diuretic

A child experiencing edema as a result of a congenital heart defect is prescribed a thiazide diuretic. The nurse should closely monitor which of the client's clinical characteristics? (Select all that apply.)

• Potassium level • Daily weight • Blood pressure • Appetite

A health care provider has prescribed a loop diuretic for a client with hypertension. The client also has diabetes mellitus. What condition should the nurse monitor for in this client after administering the prescribed drug?

Increased blood glucose levels

The pharmacology instructor is discussing the differences among the various diuretic agents. Which would the instructor cite as a difference between spironolactone and hydrochlorothiazide?

Potassium losses are greater with hydrochlorothiazide than with spironolactone.

Why would potassium-sparing diuretics be contraindicated for clients experiencing renal failure?

They may cause hyperkalemia.

When providing medication teaching about to a client prescribed spironolactone, what foods should the client be instructed to avoid?

bananas

A client with a long-standing diagnosis of heart failure has been taking hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ) for several weeks. The client reports experiencing moderate diuresis, but the care provider and the client agree that increased diuresis would be of benefit. However, the care provider has explained that the client is likely near the ceiling threshold of this drug. What is the main implication when a client prescribed hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ) is told they are, "nearing the drug's ceiling threshold"?

A higher dose of HCTZ will not result in increased diuresis.

Diuretics increase the production and output of urine. Which statement helps explain how diuretics achieve these effects?

Diuretics reduce the reabsorption of water in the kidneys.


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