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Hypoglycemia

A woman with diabetes has just given birth. While caring for this neonate, the nurse is aware that he's at risk for which complication?

Which of the following findings would lead you to suspect that a woman is developing a postpartum complication?

An absence of lochia Explanation: Women should have a lochia flow following childbirth. Absence of a flow is abnormal; it suggests dehydration from infection and fever.

When discussing heat loss in newborns, placing a newborn on a cold scale would be an example of what type of heat loss?

Conduction

Which of the following is a consequence of hypothermia in a newborn?

Holds breath 25 seconds Explanation: Apnea is the cessation of breathing for a specific amount of time, and in newborns it usually occurs when the breath is held for 15 seconds. Apnea, cyanosis, respiratory distress, and increased oxygen demand are all consequences of hypothermia.

The nurse begins intermittent oral feedings for a small-for-gestational-age newborn to prevent which of the following?

Hypoglycemia Intermittent oral feedings are initiated to prevent hypoglycemia as the newborn now must assume control of glucose homeostasis. Hydration and frequent monitoring of hematocrit are important to prevent polycythemia. Resuscitation and suctioning are used to manage meconium aspiration. Immediate resuscitation is used to manage asphyxia

An obese woman with diabetes has just given birth to a term, large for gestational age (LGA) newborn. Which of the following conditions should the nurse most expect to find in this infant?

Hypoglycemia LGA infants also need to be carefully assessed for hypoglycemia in the early hours of life because large infants require large amounts of nutritional stores to sustain their weight. If the mother had diabetes which was poorly controlled (the cause of the large size), the infant would have had an increased blood glucose level in utero to match the mother's; this caused the infant to produce elevated levels of insulin. After birth, these increased insulin levels will continue for up to 24 hours of life, possibly causing rebound hypoglycemia.

An infant that is diagnosed with meconium aspiration displays which symptom?

Intercostal and substernal retractions

When caring for a neonate of a mother with diabetes, which physiologic finding is most indicative of a hypoglycemic episode?

Jitteriness Hypoglycemia in a neonate is expressed as jitteriness, lethargy, diaphoresis, and a serum glucose level below 40 mg/dl

Which of the following data is indicative of hypothermia of the preterm infant?

Nasal flaring is a sign of respiratory distress. Infants with hypothermia show signs of respiratory distress (cyanosis, increased respirations, low oxygen saturation, nasal flaring, and grunting).

The nurse is observing a client who gave birth yesterday. Where should the nurse expect to find the top of the client's fundus?

One fingerbreadth below the umbilicus Explanation: After a client gives birth, the height of her fundus should decrease by approximately one fingerbreadth (1 cm) each day. By the end of the first postpartum day, the fundus should be one fingerbreadth below the umbilicus. Immediately after birth, the fundus may be above the umbilicus; 6 to 12 hours after birth, it should be at the level of the umbilicus; 10 days after birth, it should be below the symphysis pubis.

An 18-year-old client has given birth in the 28th week of gestation, and her newborn is showing signs of respiratory distress syndrome (RDS). Which is true for a newborn with RDS?

RDS is caused by a lack of alveolar surfactant.Respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) is a serious breathing disorder caused by a lack of alveolar surfactant. Betamethasone, a glucocorticosteroid, is often given to the mother 12 to 24 hours before a preterm birth to help reduce the severity of RDS, not to the newborn following birth. Respiratory symptoms in the newborn with RDS typically worsen within a short period of time after birth, not improve. Diagnosis of RDS is made based on a chest x-ray and the clinical symptoms of increasing respiratory distress, crackles, generalized cyanosis, and heart rates exceeding 150 beats per minute (not below 50 beats per minute).

You help a postpartum woman out of bed for the first time postpartally and notice that she has a very heavy lochia flow. Which of the following assessment findings would best help you decide that the flow is within normal limits?

The color of the flow is red. Explanation: A typical lochia flow on the first day postpartally is red; it contains no large clots; the uterus is firm, indicating that it is well contracted.

Which factor puts a client on her first postpartum day at risk for hemorrhage?

Uterine atony Explanation: Loss of uterine tone places a client at higher risk for hemorrhage. Thrombophlebitis doesn't increase the risk of hemorrhage during the postpartum period. The hemoglobin level and lochia flow are within acceptable limits

A nurse finds the uterus of a postpartum woman to be boggy and somewhat relaxed. This a sign of which of the following?

atony Explanation: The uterus in a postpartum patient should be midline and firm. A boggy or relaxed uterus signifies uterine atony, which can predispose the woman to hemorrhage.

A patient appears to be resting comfortably 12 hours after delivering her first child. In contrast, she labored for more than 24 hours, the physician had to use forceps to deliver the baby, and she had multiple vaginal examinations during labor. Based on this information what postpartum complication is the patient at risk for developing?

infection Explanation: There are many risk factors for developing a postpartum infection: operative procedures(eg, forceps, cesarean section, vacuum extraction), history of diabetes, prolonged labor (longer than 24 hours), use of Foley catheter, anemia, multiple vaginal examinations during labor, prolonged rupture of membranes, manual extraction of placenta, and HIV.

A nurse is instructing students on how to check an episiotomy and perineum of a woman after Which of the following are normal in the early postpartum period? (Select all that apply.)

• edema • slight bruising Explanation: During the early postpartum period, the perineal tissue surrounding the episiotomy is typically edematous and slightly bruised. The normal episiotomy site should not have redness or discharge.


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