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A nurse is teaching an adolescent with type 1 diabetes about the disease. Which instruction by the nurse about how to prevent hypoglycemia would be most appropriate for the adolescent?

"Carry crackers or fruit to eat before or during periods of increased activity." Hypoglycemia can usually be prevented if an adolescent with diabetes eats more food before or during exercise. Because exercise with adolescents isn't commonly planned, carrying additional carbohydrate foods is a good preventive measure.

A nurse is to see a child. Assessment reveals the chief complaints of urinating "a lot" and being "really thirsty." The nurse interprets these symptoms as being associated with which condition?

Diabetes insipidus The most common symptoms of central diabetes insipidus are polyuria (excessive urination) and polydipsia (excessive thirst). Children with diabetes insipidustypically excrete 4 to 15 L/day of urine despite the fluid intake. The onset of these symptoms is usually sudden and abrupt. Ask about repeated trips to the bathroom, nocturia, and enuresis. Other symptoms may include dehydration, fever, weight loss, increased irritability, vomiting, constipation, and, potentially, hypovolemic shock.

A 4-year-old diagnosed with diabetes insipidus is being discharged. Which information below is most important to emphasize to the parents?

Diabetes insipidus is different from diabetes mellitus. Having all caregivers trained in injections ensures that medication will be given and the need to give it to the child will be understood. All children should wear a medical alert tag upon diagnosis. For the caregiver to have a good understanding and provide good management of the child's care, the difference between diabetes insipidus and diabetes mellitus must be established. This is a rare disorder that needs to be closely managed throughout the child's life, and it is not curable.

A nurse is reviewing with an 8-year-old how to self-administer insulin. Which of the following is the proper injection technique for insulin injections?

Elevate the subcutaneous tissue before the injection. Insulin injections are always given subcutaneously. Elevating the skin tissue prevents injection into muscles when subcutaneous injections are given. The needle bevel should face upward. The skin is spread in intramuscular, not subcutaneous, injections. It is no longer recommended to aspirate blood for subcutaneous injections.

What should be included in the teaching plan for a child with type 1 diabetes mellitus who is going home on insulin therapy?

It is absolutely normal for the growing child to require an increase in insulin; this does not mean his/her condition is getting worse. Children show a decreased need for insulin shortly after glucose control has been established, which is referred to by some as the "honeymoon phase" and should be described to parents so that they do not get any false hope that the child does not need insulin. As children grow, they will require increased doses of insulin to maintain glucose control, and not all children need to receive two types of insulin. Insulin treatment should be based on each individual child.

A nurse should recognize that which laboratory result would be most consistent with a diagnosis of diabetes mellitus?

a fasting blood glucose greater than 126 mg/dL A fasting blood glucose greater than 126 mg/dL is diagnostic for diabetes mellitus.

Insulin deficiency, increased levels of counter regulatory hormones, and dehydration are the primary causes of:

diabetic ketoacidosis. diabetic ketoacidosis.

A 7-year-old cjo;d is diagnosed as having type 1 diabetes. What is one of the first symptoms usually noticed by parents when this illness develops?

loss of weight The classic signs of type 1 diabetes are polydipsia, polyuria, and polyphagia. With polyphagia, the child has an increased appetite and an increased hunger, and the child eats all the time but is losing weight. This occurs because the lack of energy sugar supplies cause the muscle tissues and the fat stores to shrink. The lack of insulin also reduces the ability of the body's cells to use glucose. This leads to starvation of the cells. Loss of weight is an early symptom parents see first. They tend to equate the increased appetite as normal with growing, but become concerned when the child starts losing weight even though the child is eating. Itching and swelling are not signs of diabetes. A craving for sweets is normal for a child, especially one who is growing rapidly.


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