Pain 10

Ace your homework & exams now with Quizwiz!

Wha is inflammatory pain?

- a subtype of nociceptive pain that results from the release of pro inflammatory cytokines at the site of tissue injury. - present in acute pain (bruises or infection) and chronic pain (rheumatoid arthritis)

What are coanalgesics?

- antidepressants - anticonvulsant - sodium channel blocked - NDMA receptor antagonists - Antispasmodic skeletal muscle relaxants -anti-spastic agent

What is visceral pain?

arises from visceral organs, such as the GI tract and bladder: well or poorly localized bowel obstruction, gallbladder pain, appendix

What is cancer-related pain?

- Pain associated with malignancy that can result from the disease itself of damage to secondary tissue - Pain secondary to direct tumor involvement of bone, nerves, viscera, or soft tissue

What is chronic pain?

- Pain continues for 6 months or longer despite efforts to diagnosis and treat original condition/injury - Peripheral and central sensitization of pathways occurs

What are the medications used for pain management?

- nonopiod analgesics - acetaminophen - non steroidal anti-inflammatory drus - opioids - morphine and congeners; fentanyl and congeners - dual- mechanics analgesics - opioid antagonist- naloxone

What is breakthrough pain?

- transient, moderate to severe pain that occurs in patients whose pain is otherwise well controlled - true this type of pain is characterized as brief, lasting minutes to hours, and can interfere with ADLs

Neuropathic central pain is best described as: A. diabetic feet B. Migraine headache C. Bone pain D. GI pain

B. Migraine headache

Patient complains fo pain from a migraine. How would the practitioner classify this type of pain? A. Central neuropathic pain B. Peripheral neuropathic pain C. Inflammatory Pain D. Somatic nociceptive pain

A. Central neuropathic pain

Osteoarthritis is most effectively treated with the following: A. Demerol 5 mg IM B. Tylenol 650 mg PO C. Morphine 2 mg IV D. Gabapentin 300 mg po

B. Tylenol 650 mg PO

Ms. Smith reports her pain is 5 on a scale of 1 to 10. The most appropriate initial medication to treat her pain is? A. Tylenol 650 mg PO B. Naloxone 0.2mg IV C. Toradol 30 mg IM D. Morphine 2 mg IV

C. Toradol 30 mg IM moderate pain go for IM

Mr. James reports his pain is 2 on a scale of 1 to 10. the most appropriate medication to initially treat his pain is? A. morphine 2 mg iv B. Demerol 50 mg IM C. Tylenol 650 mg PO D. Naloxone 0.2 mg IV

C. Tylenol 650 mg PO

Acute inflammatory pain is best described as? A, Migraine headache b. arthritis c. wound pain d. diabetic feet

C. Wound Pain

Mrs. Horner reports her pain is 10 on a scale of 1 to 10. The most appropriate initial medication to treat her pain is? A. Tylenol 650 mg po B. gabapentin 300 mg C. morphine 2 mg IV D. Naloxone 0.2 mg IV

C. morphine 2 mg IV use opioid for severe pain

Diabetic neuropathy pain is best treat by? A. Tylenol 650 B. Toradol 30 mg IM C. Morphine 2 mg IV D. Gabapentin 300 mg PO

D. Gabapentin 300 mg PO

Mrs. Holcomb has neuropathic pain. The APRN prescribes medication based on which of the following? A. morphine is recommended for neuropathic pain B. Analgesics that block nociceptive receptors are recommended for neuropathic pain D. medications that increase concentration of GABA are recommended for neuropathic pain

D. medications that increase concentration of GABA are recommended for neuropathic pain

A practitioner conducting a pain assessment asks the patient "is the pain consistent or intermittent?" What character of pain is the practicer assessing? A. quality b. region C. severity D. temporal pattern

D. temporal pattern

Nociceptive visceral pain is most effectively treated with the following? A. tylenol 650 mg q 6 hours b. naloxone 0.2 mg IV now C. dilaudid 1 mg IV now D. torodol IV

Dilaudid 1 mg

What is the best choice for cancer pains?

Long acting narcotics

What is the recommended order of pain treatment for pain ranked: 1-3/ mild?

NSAID/APA

What is the recommended order of pain treatment for pain ranked: 8-10/ Severe?

NSAID/APA if suspected inflammatory component, usually opioids, co-analgesics

What is the recommended order of pain treatment for pain ranked: 4-7/ moderate?

NSAID/APA, usually opioids, co-analgesics

What are common side effects of opioids?

Respiratory depression, constipation, miosis, hypotension, and bradycardia, itching, nausea and vomitng, sedation

Nociceptive somatic pain is most frequently found in?

bone

What is nociceptive pain?

a result of a nerve receptor stimulation following a mechanical, thermal, or chemical insult

What is pain?

an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, od described in terms of such damage. subjective and its intensity varies from patient to patient and form day to day

What is the treatment of choice for inflammatory pain?

anti-inflammatory

What is the only way to treat nociceptor pain?

block the receptors

What is the choice of treatment for visceral pain?

fentanyl, morphine schedule 2 narcotic

What is the choice treatment for neuropathic pain?

gabapentin can prescribe starting at 300mg twice a day

What is the best treatment for somatic pain?

morphine or fentanyl must hit opioids receptors in brain

What is somatic pain?

originating from muscle, bone, joints, tendons, or blood vessels and is often well localized tore ligaments, rupture tendons. bone cancer/fractures, severe burns

What is the most reliable indicator of pain?

self reporting

What is acute pain?

sudden onset, usually subsides once treated, characterized by sharp, localize sensations with identifiable cause, can point right to it

What is neuropathic pain?

pain that arises from abnormal or damaged pain nerves [e.g., phantom limb pain, pain below the level of a spinal cord injury, diabetic neuropathy]; This is not the nerve receptor - usually intense, shooting, burning, or "pins and needles" - peripheral pain: diabetes, neuropathies, shingles. - Central: pain from multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injuries, migraine and post stroke syndrome

What is chronic non cancer pain?

persistent pain seen in patients no affected by cancer, examples are osteoarthritis and fibromyalgia.


Related study sets

Quiz 8: Sampling Methods: Quantitative and Qualitative

View Set

NEW!!!: Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass

View Set

OCT 1141H: Standardized Assessment and Outcome Measurement - Sept 27 Lecture

View Set

Chapter 6: Health Insurance Underwriting

View Set

Jensen's Health Assessment 3rd Ed. | Chapter 26

View Set