Fluid & Electrolytes CH. 4

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Which of the following is considered an isotonic solution? a) 0.45% normal saline b) 3% NaCl c) 0.9% normal saline d) Dextran in NS

0.9% normal saline An isotonic solution is 0.9% normal saline (NaCl). Dextran in NS is a colloid solution, 0.45% normal saline is a hypotonic solution, and 3% NaCl is a hypertonic solution.

You are making rounds on your clients. You find one of your clients struggling to breathe, appears confused, has tachycardia, and the skin appears dusky. What should you do to restore normal pH if ventilation efforts are not very successful? a) Administer sodium bicarbonate IV. b) Give bronchodilators. c) Infuse magnesium sulfate. d) Start potassium IV.

Administer sodium bicarbonate IV. When the client makes frantic efforts to breathe, breathes slowly, or stops breathing, and has tachycardia, and the skin appears dusky (cyanosis), the condition is likely to be acute respiratory acidosis. The accumulation of CO2 leads to behavioral changes, including confusion. Excess carbonic acid pulls pH below 7.35. The nurse should administer sodium bicarbonate IV to balance the acid and bring the pH to a normal level. Bronchodilators may be useful in chronic respiratory acidosis but not in the acute version. Potassium (needed in hypokalemia) and magnesium sulfate (needed in hypomagnesemia) have no role in acute respiratory acidosis

A nurse reviews the arterial blood gas (ABG) values of a client admitted with pneumonia: pH, 7.51; PaCO2, 28 mm Hg; PaO2, 70 mm Hg; and HCO3--, 24 mEq/L. What do these values indicate? a) Respiratory alkalosis b) Metabolic alkalosis c) Respiratory acidosis d) Metabolic acidosis

Respiratory alkalosis A client with pneumonia may hyperventilate in an effort to increase oxygen intake. Hyperventilation leads to excess carbon dioxide (CO2) loss, which causes alkalosis — indicated by this client's elevated pH value. With respiratory alkalosis, the kidneys' bicarbonate (HCO3-) response is delayed, so the client's HCO3- level remains normal. The below-normal value for the partial pressure of arterial carbon dioxide (PaCO2) indicates CO2 loss and signals a respiratory component. Because the HCO3- level is normal, this imbalance has no metabolic component. Therefore, the client is experiencing respiratory alkalosis.


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