Chapter 60: Introduction to the Musculoskeletal System
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."
Which body movement involves moving toward the midline?
Adduction
Which of the following diagnostic studies are done to relieve joint pain due to effusion?
Arthrocentesis
Which is useful in identifying acute or chronic tears of the joint capsule or supporting ligaments of the knee, shoulder, ankle, hip, or wrist?
Arthrography
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
An older adult client has symptoms of osteoporosis and is being assessed during her annual physical examination. The assessment shows that the client will require further testing related to a possible exacerbation of her osteoporosis. The nurse should anticipate what diagnostic test?
Bone densitometry
Which hormone inhibits bone reabsorption and increases calcium deposit in the bone?
Calcitonin
Which is an indicator of neurovascular compromise?
Capillary refill of more than 3 seconds
A client has had a cast placed for the treatment of a humeral fracture. The nurse's most recent assessment shows signs and symptoms of compartment syndrome. What is the nurse's most appropriate action?
Contact the primary provider immediately.
Which term refers to the shaft of the long bone?
Diaphysis
Which diagnostic test would the nurse expect to be ordered for a client with lower extremity muscle weakness?
Electromyograph (EMG)
The nurse's musculoskeletal assessment of a client reveals involuntary twitching of muscle groups. How would the nurse document this observation in the client's chart?
Fasciculations
A nurse is taking a health history on a new client who has been experiencing unexplained paresthesia. What question should guide the nurse's assessment of the client's altered sensations?
How does the feeling in the affected extremity compare with the feeling in the unaffected extremity?
The nurse's comprehensive assessment of an older adult involves the assessment of the client's gait. How should the nurse best perform this assessment?
Instruct the client to walk away from the nurse for a short distance and then toward the nurse.
A nurse is caring for an older adult who has been diagnosed with geriatric failure to thrive. The nurse should perform interventions to prevent what complication?
Muscle atrophy
A child is growing at a rate appropriate for his age. What cells are responsible for the secretion of bone matrix that eventually results in bone growth?
Osteoblasts
A nurse performs a neurovascular assessment on a client 2 weeks after a wrist cast had been removed. The nurse documents in the client's chart that there is normal sensation in the ulnar nerve. What finger assessment test will the nurse perform on this client?
Prick the distal fat pad on the small finger.
What would not be included in client and family teaching after a musculoskeletal injury?
Pursue any physical activities that are comfortable.
A patient has a fracture of the right femur sustained in an automobile accident. What process of fracture healing does the nurse understand will occur with this patient?
Reactive phase, reparative phase, remodeling phase
After a fracture, during which stage or phase of bone healing is devitalized tissue removed and new bone reorganized into its former structural arrangement?
Remodeling
A nurse's assessment of a teenage girl reveals that her shoulders are not level and that she has one prominent scapula that is accentuated by bending forward. The nurse should expect to read about what health problem in the client's electronic health record?
Scoliosis
What is the term for a lateral curving of the spine?
Scoliosis
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.
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
tendons are cordlike structures that attatch muscles to periosteum of bone, which is not true ?
Tendons attach muscle to a bone in just one location.
A client has just had an arthroscopy performed to assess a knee injury. What nursing intervention should the nurse perform following this procedure?
Wrap the joint in a compression dressing.
While reading a client's chart, the nurse notices that the client is documented to have paresthesia. The nurse plans care for a client with
abnormal sensations.
A nurse is caring for a client with a diagnosis of cancer that has metastasized. What laboratory value would the nurse expect to be elevated in this client?
alkaline phosphate
During the physical assessment of a client with a musculoskeletal disorder, which techniques would enable the nurse to determine the client's ability to exhibit fine motor skills?
asking the client to grasp objects
A client has been experiencing progressive increases in knee pain and diagnostic imaging reveals a worsening effusion in the synovial capsule. The nurse should anticipate what diagnostic procedure?
athrocentesis
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.
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?
between the ribs between the vertebrae covering elbow joints
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
Which hormone inhibits bone resorption and increases the deposit of calcium in the bone?
calcitonin
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
An older adult client has come to the clinic for a regular check-up. The nurse's initial inspection reveals an increased thoracic curvature of the client's spine. The nurse should document the presence of
kyphosis.
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
The human body has 206 bones, which are classified into four categories. Which types of bones are located in the digits?
short bones
A client is receiving ongoing nursing care for the treatment of Parkinson disease. When assessing this client's gait, what finding is most closely associated with this health problem?
shuffling gait
An example of a flat bone is the
sternum
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
The nurse is teaching a client about osteoporosis. What diagnostic test will the nurse include with the client teaching?
dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry
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