Med Surg Chapter 62: Managements of Patients With Burn Injury

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A manufacturing plant has exploded, and the nurse is assigned to triage burn victims as they arrive to the hospital. Which is the most important question for the nurse to ask prior to the arrival of victims?

"Are the burns associated with chemicals used in the plant?"

A patient is being discharged after sustaining a deep-partial thickness burn during a house fire. The patient is asking when the burn will be healed. The nurse understands that this type of burn injury heals within which of the following time frames?

2 to 4 weeks

The nurse is planning the care of a patient with a major thermal burn. What outcome will the nurse understand will be optimal during fluid replacement?

A urinary output of 30 mL/hr

Burn shock is characterized by which of the following?

Capillary leak

Which of the following is a quick assessment technique to assess the percentage of burn injury?

Comparing the patient's palm with the size of the burn wound

The nurse is providing care for a patent with a full-thickness, circumferential burn of the left lower leg. During the nurse's initial shift assessment, the patient is resting and the physical assessment of the left lower extremity is unremarkable. One hour later, the nurse notes the pulses of the left lower leg cannot be obtained by a Doppler ultrasound device, and the capillary refill of the left great toe is greater than 2 seconds. The nurse's best response based on the clinical findings is which of the following?

Contact the primary care provider and prepare for an escharotomy.

Which type of burn injury involves destruction of the epidermis and upper layers of the dermis and injury to the deeper portions of the dermis?

Deep partial-thickness

A nurse practitioner administers first aid to a patient with a deep partial-thickness burn on his left foot. The nurse describes the skin involvement as the:

Epidermis and a portion of deeper dermis.

A client presents with a full-thickness burn to the anterior chest. The leathery skin is tight, making breathing difficult. The nurse anticipates which treatment management technique in the care of this client?

Escharotomy

Which is the primary nursing intervention in the care of a client with burns exceeding 20% of total body surface area?

Fluid resuscitation

Bill Jenkins has suffered from a burn on his leg related to an engine fire. Burn depth is determined by assessing the color, characteristics of the skin, and sensation in the area. When the burn area was assessed, it was determined that he felt no pain in the area and that it appeared charred. What depth of burn injury would he be said to have?

Full thickness (third degree)

Which type of burn injury requires skin grafting?

Full-thickness

Skin grafts are necessary for which of the following burns?

Fullthickness

A person suffers leg burns from spilled charcoal lighter fluid. A family member extinguishes the flames. While waiting for an ambulance, what should the burned person do?

Have someone assist him into a bath of cool water, where he can wait for emergency personnel.

When assessing a client with partial-thickness burns over 60% of the body, which finding should the nurse report immediately?

Hoarseness of the voice

Immediately after a burn injury, electrolytes need to be evaluated for a major indicator of massive cell destruction which is:

Hyperkalemia.

The nurse is caring for a patient who sustained a full-thickness burn to his arm when he was scalded with boiling water. How did the nurse determine that the patient's burns are full-thickness burns?

Identification by the destruction of the dermis and epidermis

A child tips a pot of boiling water onto his bare legs. The mother should:

Immerse the child's legs in cool water.

The nurse is administering an analgesic to a patient with major burns. What is the recommended route for administration for this patient?

Intravenous

A client presents with blistering wounds caused by an unknown chemical agent. How should the nurse intervene?

Irrigate the wounds with water.

Which of the following is the effect of protein catabolism in a client with severe burns?

It compromises wound healing and immunocompetence.

The nurse understands that during the emergent/resuscitative phase of burn injury, hemoconcentration is due to which of the following?

Liquid blood component is lost into extravascular space

In a client who has been burned, which medication should the nurse expect to use to prevent infection?

Mafenide (Sulfamylon)

Which type of débridement involves the use of surgical scissors, scalpels, and forceps to separate and remove the eschar?

Mechanical

A client with superficial burns on the face and deep partial-thickness burns on the neck and chest undergoing treatment is anxious to know about skin grafting. For which of the following areas can skin grafting be suggested?

Neck and chest

The nurse is caring for a patient who sustained a major burn. What serious gastrointestinal disturbance should the nurse monitor for that frequently occurs with a major burn?

Paralytic ileus

complete absence of peristaltic movement that may follow abdominal surgery or complete bowel obstruction

Paralytic ileus

The nurse knows that inflammatory response following a burn is proportional to the extent of injury. Which factor presents the greatest impact on the ability to modify the magnitude and duration of the inflammatory response in a client with a burn?

Preexisting conditions

Which instruction is the most important to give a client who has recently had a skin graft?

Protect the graft from direct sunlight.

A nurse is aware that after a burn injury and respiratory difficulties have been managed, the next most urgent need is to:

Replace lost fluids and electrolytes.

Which of the following interventions helps to minimize the risk of further injury to an affected person at a scene of a fire?

Roll the patient in a blanket

The nurse is providing wound care for a client with burns to the lower extremities. Which topical antibacterial agent carries a side effect of leukopenia that the nurse should monitor for within 48 hours after application?

Sulfadiazine, silver (Silvadene)

All of the following are antimicrobials commonly used to treat burns except:

Tetracycline

An explosion of a fuel tanker has resulted in melting of clothing on the driver and extensive full-body burns. The client is brought into the emergency department alert, denying pain, and joking with the staff. Which is the best interpretation of this behavior?

The client has experienced extensive full-thickness burns.

A nurse is required to monitor the effectiveness of fluid resuscitation in a client who is being treated for burns. Which of the following assessments would indicate the success of the fluid resuscitation?

The client's urinary output is 0.5 mL/kg/hour.

Which is the primary reason for placing a client in a horizontal position while smothering flames are present?

To keep fire and smoke from airway

Following a burn, the nurse understands that the focused management of which burn zone is of greatest concern?

Zone of stasis

A client with a superficial partial-thickness solar burn (sunburn) of the chest, back, face, and arms is seen in urgent care. The nurse's primary concern should be:

pain management.

A patient is being cared for in a burn unit after suffering partial-thickness burns. The patient's laboratory work reveals a positive wound culture for gram-negative bacteria. The health care provider orders silver sulfadiazine (Silvadene) to be applied to the patient's burns. The nurse provides information to the patient about the medication. Which of the following statements made by the patient indicates an understanding about this treatment? Select all that apply.

• "This medication is an antibacterial." • "This medication will be applied directly to the wound." • "This medication will help my burn heal."

Which of the following is to be expected soon after a major burn? Select all that apply.

• Hypotension • Tachycardia • Anxiety

The open method (exposure method) of burn care, which exposes the burned areas to air, has been virtually abandoned since the advent of effective topical antimicrobials. It is still used on a small scale however. On which areas of the body are burns still being treated this way? Select all that apply.

• The face • The perineum


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