wound prepu

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The nurse is teaching a client about wound care at home following a cesarean birth of her baby. Which client statement requires further nursing teaching? "I may have staples in place for a number of days." "I will not remove the staples myself." "After delivery, I will have sutures in place." "Reinforced adhesive skin closures will hold my wound together until it heals."

"Reinforced adhesive skin closures will hold my wound together until it heals." Explanation: After a cesarean birth, a client will be sutured and have staples put in place for a number of days. The health care provider or nurse will remove staples. Reinforced adhesive skin closures are not strong enough to hold this type of wound together.

The acute care nurse is caring for a client whose large surgical wound is healing by secondary intention. The client asks, "Why is my wound still open? Will it ever heal?" Which response by the nurse is most appropriate? "Your wound will heal slowly as granulation tissue forms and fills the wound." "Your surgeon may not have been skilled enough to close such a large wound, but it will eventually heal." "If less scar tissue is essential, wounds are allowed to heal slowly through a process called secondary intention." "As soon as the infection clears, your surgeon will staple the wound closed."

"Your wound will heal slowly as granulation tissue forms and fills the wound." Explanation: This statement is correct, because it provides education to the client: "Your wound will heal slowly as granulation tissue forms and fills the wound." Large wounds with extensive tissue loss may not be able to be closed by primary intention, which is surgical intervention. Secondary intention, in which the wound is left open and closes naturally, is not done if less of a scar is necessary. Third intention is when a wound is left open for a few days and then, if there is no indication of infection, closed by a surgeon.

A postoperative client says during a transfer, "I feel like something just popped." The nurse immediately assesses for: infection. herniation. dehiscence. evisceration.

dehiscence. Explanation: Dehiscence is a total or partial disruption of wound edges. Clients often report feeling that the incision has given way. Manifestations of infection include redness, warmth, swelling, and fever. With herniation, there is protrusion through a bodily opening. Evisceration is a term that describes protrusion of intra-abdominal contents

A nurse is caring for a 78-year-old client who was admitted after a femur fracture. The primary care provider placed the client on bed rest. Which action should the nurse perform to prevent a pressure injury? elevate the head of the bed 90 degrees use pillows to maintain a side-lying position as needed provide incontinent care every 4 hours as needed place a foot board on the bed

use pillows to maintain a side-lying position as needed Explanation: Using pillows to maintain a side-lying position allows the nursing staff to change position to alleviate and alternate pressure on client's bony prominences. The client's position should be changed a minimum of every 2 hours. In addition, incontinent care should be performed a minimum of every 2 hours and as needed to decrease moisture and irritation of the skin. A foot board prevents foot drop but does not decrease the risk for pressure injury.

The nurse is teaching a client about healing of a minor surgical wound by first intention. What teaching will the nurse include? "Very little scar tissue will form." "This is a complex reparative process." "The margins of your wound are not in direct contact." "The surgeon will leave your wound open intentionally for a period of time."

"Very little scar tissue will form." Explanation: Very little scar tissue is expected to form in a minor surgical wound. Second-intention healing involves a complex reparative process in which the margins of the wound are not in direct contact. Third-intention healing takes place when the wound edges are intentionally left widely separated and later brought together for closure.

A nurse is cleaning the wound of a client who has been injured by a gunshot. Which guideline is recommended for this procedure? Use clean technique to clean the wound. Clean the wound in a circular pattern, beginning on the perimeter of the wound. Clean the wound from the top to the bottom and from the center to outside. Once the wound is cleaned, gently dry the wound bed with an absorbent cloth.

Clean the wound from the top to the bottom and from the center to outside. Explanation: Using sterile technique, clean the wound from the top to the bottom and from the center to the outside. Dry the area with a gauze sponge, not an absorbent cloth.

The nurse is caring for a client who has two Jackson-Pratt drains following her bilateral mastectomy. When emptying a Jackson-Pratt drain, the nurse should prioritize what action? Don sterile gloves before manipulating the cap of the drain. Cleanse the area around the cap with alcohol for 30 seconds before removing it. Pin the drain to the client's gown after pulling the tubing taut. Recompress the drain before replacing the cap.

Recompress the drain before replacing the cap. Explanation: Recompressing the drain after replacing the cap would force air and exudate into the client, causing pain and posing an infection risk. Gloves are necessary for this procedure, but they do not need to be sterile. It is unnecessary to cleanse the area around the cap with alcohol. It is important that the tubing should not be under tension.

The nurse is helping a confused client with a large leg wound order dinner. Which food item is most appropriate for the nurse to select to promote wound healing? Pasta salad Fish Banana Green beans

Fish Explanation: To promote wound healing, the nurse should ensure that the client's diet is high in protein, vitamin A, and vitamin C. The fish is high in protein and is therefore the most appropriate choice to promote wound healing. Pasta salad has a high carbohydrate amount with no protein. Banana has a high amount of vitamin C but no protein. Green beans have some protein but not as much as fish.

A client's pressure injury is superficial and presents clinically as an abrasion, blister, or shallow crater. How would the nurse document this pressure injury? Stage I Stage II Stage III Stage IV

Stage II Explanation: A stage II pressure injury involves partial thickness loss of dermis and presents as a shallow, open ulcer. A stage II injury could present as a blister, abrasion, or shallow crater. A stage I pressure injury is a defined area of intact skin with nonblanchable redness of a localized area, usually over a bony prominence. Darkly pigmented skin may not have visible blanching; its color may differ from the surrounding skin. The area may be painful, firm, soft, warmer, or cooler as compared to adjacent tissue. A stage III injury presents with full-thickness tissue loss. Subcutaneous fat may be visible, but bone, tendon, or muscle is not exposed. Slough that may be present does not obscure the depth of tissue loss. Injuries at this stage may include undermining and tunneling. Stage IV injuries involve full-thickness tissue loss with exposed bone, tendon, or muscle. Slough or eschar may be present on some part of the wound bed and often include undermining and tunneling.

A nurse is evaluating a client who was admitted with partial-thickness or second-degree burns. Which describes this type of burn? Usually moist with blisters, which may be pink, red, pale ivory, or light yellow-brown Superficial, which may be pinkish or red with no blistering May vary from brown or black to cherry red or pearly white; bullae may be present A superficial partial-thickness burn, which can appear dry and leathery

Usually moist with blisters, which may be pink, red, pale ivory, or light yellow-brown Explanation: Second-degree burns are moderate to deep partial-thickness burns that may be pink, red, pale ivory, or light yellow-brown. They are usually moist with blisters. First-degree burns are superficial and may be pinkish or red with no blistering. Third-degree burns are full-thickness burns and may vary from brown or black to cherry-red or pearly-white; bullae may be present; can appear dry and leathery

The nurse is assessing the wounds of clients in a burn unit. Which wound would most likely heal by primary intention? a surgical incision with sutured approximated edges a large wound with considerable tissue loss allowed to heal naturally a wound left open for several days to allow edema to subside a wound healing naturally that becomes infected.

a surgical incision with sutured approximated edges Explanation: Wounds healed by primary intention are well approximated (skin edges tightly together). Intentional wounds with minimal tissue loss, such as those made by a surgical incision with sutured approximated edges, usually heal by primary intention. Wounds healed by secondary intention have edges that are not well approximated. Large, open wounds, such as from burns or major trauma, which require more tissue replacement and are often contaminated, commonly heal by secondary intention. If a wound that is healing by primary intention becomes infected, it will heal by secondary intention. Wounds that heal by secondary intention take longer to heal and form more scar tissue. Connective tissue healing and repair follow the same phases in healing. However, differences occur in the length of time required for each phase and in the extent of new tissue formed. Wounds healed by tertiary intention, or delayed primary closure, are those wounds left open for several days to allow edema or infection to resolve or fluid to drain, and then are closed.

A client has been admitted to the acute care unit after surgery to debride an infected skin injury. The surgeon reports plans to leave the wound open to promote drainage and later close it. This represents what type of wound healing? primary intention secondary intention tertiary intention quadratic intention

tertiary intention Explanation: Healing by tertiary intention occurs when a delay ensues between injury and wound closure. This type of healing also is referred to as delayed primary closure. It may happen when a deep wound is not sutured immediately or is purposely left open until there is no sign of infection, then closed with sutures. Wounds with minimal tissue loss, such as clean surgical incisions and shallow sutured wounds, heal by primary intention. The edges of the primary wound are approximated or lightly pulled together. Wounds with full-thickness tissue loss, such as deep lacerations, burns, and pressure injuries, have edges that do not readily approximate. They heal by secondary intention. The open wound gradually fills with granulation tissue.


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