NUR 332: Cardio coursepoint
A client with restrictive cardiomyopathy (RCM) is taking digoxin. Because of the risk of increased sensitivity, the nurse should carefully assess the client for which manifestations?
Anorexia and confusion--The most common manifestations of digoxin toxicity are gastrointestinal (anorexia, nausea, and vomiting), cardiac (rhythm disturbances and heart block), and central nervous system disturbances (confusion, headache, weakness, dizziness, and blurred or yellow vision).
While assessing a patient with pericarditis, the nurse cannot auscultate a friction rub. Which action should the nurse implement?
Ask the patient to lean forward and listen again-- The most characteristic sign of pericarditis is a creaky or scratchy friction rub heard most clearly at the left lower sternal border. Having the patient lean forward and to the left uses gravity to force the heart nearer to the chest wall, which allows the friction rub to be heard. These assessment data are not life-threatening and do not require a call to the health care provider. The nurse should try multiple times to auscultate the friction rub before deciding that the rub is gone. Chest tubes are not the treatment of choice for not hearing friction rubs.
The nurse is caring for a patient diagnosed with pericarditis. What serious complication should this patient be monitored for?
Cardiac tamponade-- The inflammatory process of pericarditis may lead to an accumulation of fluid in the pericardial sac (pericardial effusion) and increased pressure on the heart, leading to cardiac tamponade (see Chapter 29).
When evaluating a patient suspected of having pericarditis, the nurse documents the description of which indicator that is considered the most characteristic symptom?
Chest pain-- The most characteristic symptom of pericarditis is chest pain. The pain is typically persistent, sharp, pleuritic, and usually felt in the mid chest, although it also may be located beneath the clavicle, in the neck, or in the left trapezius region.
During assessment of a client admitted for cardiomyopathy, the nurse notes the following symptoms: dyspnea on exertion, fatigue, fluid retention, and nausea. The initial appropriate nursing diagnosis is which of the following?
Decreased cardiac output
Which signs and symptoms accompany a diagnosis of pericarditis?
Fever, chest discomfort, and elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR)
A nursing student is caring for a client with end-stage cardiomyopathy. The client's spouse asks the student to clarify one of the last treatment options available that the physician mentioned. After checking with the primary nurse, the student would most likely discuss which of the following?
Heart transplantation--When heart failure progresses and medical treatment is no longer effective, surgical intervention, including heart transplantation, is considered. The other three choices have to do with failing valves and valve repairs.
In which type of cardiomyopathy does the heart muscle actually increase in size and mass weight, especially along the septum?
Hypertrophic
A nurse reviewing a client's echocardiogram report reads the following statements: "The heart muscle is asymmetrically thickened and the overall size and mass are increased, especially along the septum. The ventricular walls are thickened, reducing the size of the ventricular cavities. Several areas of the myocardium show evidence of scaring." The nurse knows these manifestations are indicative of which type of cardiomyopathy?
Hypertrophic-- The narrow arterioles restrict the blood supply to the myocardium, causing numerous small areas of ischemia and necrosis.
A patient with endocarditis is being discharged home. In evaluating the effectiveness of patient teaching about how to prevent recurrence of the infection, the student nurse would expect the patient to state:
I will ask for antibiotics whenever I have dental work done-- The patient should take antibiotics for dental procedures that involve manipulation of gingival tissue or the periapical area of the teeth or perforation of the oral mucosa
If a client were to develop rheumatic carditis, which cardiac structure would most likely be affected?
In rheumatic carditis, cardiac structures that usually are affected include the heart valves (particularly the mitral valve), endocardium, myocardium, and pericardium.
A nursing student is caring for a client with end-stage cardiomyopathy. The client's spouse asks the nurse to clarify one of the last treatment options available that the physician mentioned earlier. After checking with the primary nurse, the nursing student would most likely discuss which of the following?
Left ventricular assist device
Which nursing intervention should a nurse perform to reduce cardiac workload in a client diagnosed with myocarditis?
Maintain the client on bed rest
A nurse caring for a patient with mitral stenosis understands that the initial cause of disruption to the normal flow of blood through the heart is due to:
The increased resistance of a narrowed orifice between the left atrium and the left ventricle-- Left atrial pressure increases because of the slowed blood flow into the LV through the narrowed orifice.
Which changes occur to the heart as a result of heart transplant?
The transplanted heart beats faster than the client's natural heart, averaging 90 to 110 beats/minute, because sympathetic and vagus nerves that affect heart rate have been severed. The new heart also takes longer to increase the heart rate in response to exercise. Coronary artery disease is a common problem among heart transplant recipients.
When evaluating a patient suspected of having pericarditis, the nurse documents the description of which indicator that is considered the most characteristic symptom?
chest pain-- The pain is typically persistent, sharp, pleuritic, and usually felt in the mid chest, although it also may be located beneath the clavicle, in the neck, or in the left trapezius region.
The nurse determines that a patient has a characteristic symptom of pericarditis. What symptom does the nurse recognize as significant for this diagnosis?
constant chest pain
A client reports headaches and "just not feeling right," which the client blames on ongoing sleep disturbances. Inspection reveals Janeway lesions on the bottoms of the client's feet. These symptoms may indicate:
infective endocarditis-- Subacute endocarditis infections progress insidiously over weeks to months with vague manifestations, such as headache, malaise, fatigue, and sleep disturbances. Small, painless, red-blue macular lesions or Janeway lesions may appear on the palms of the hands and soles of the feet.