Test 4 disorders of cardiac function, heart failure, and circulatory shock ch27
Which statement regarding heart failure is true?
In compensated heart failure, an increase of end-diastolic volume causes increased force of left ventricular contraction.
Tetralogy of Fallot is a congenital condition of the heart that manifests in four distinct anomalies of the infant heart. It is considered a cyanotic heart defect because of the right-to-left shunting of the blood through the ventricular septal defect. A hallmark of this condition is the "tet spells" that occur in these children. What is a tet spell?
A hypercyanotic attack brought on by periods of stress
Increased cardiac workload with left-sided heart failure can result in which change to the myocardial cells?
Hypertrophy
The nurse knows that which statement regarding heart failure is most accurate?
In compensated failure, an increase in preload causes an increase in ventricular contractility.
A client with a history of acute coronary syndrome asks why she needs to take aspirin 81 mg every day. The most appropriate response by the nurse would be:
"Aspirin will help prevent blood clotting.
Knowing the high incidence and prevalence of heart failure among older adults, the manager of a long-term care home has organized a workshop on the identification of early signs and symptoms of heart failure. Which teaching point is most accurate?
"Displays of aggression, confusion, and restlessness when the resident has no history of such behavior can be a sign of heart failure."
Which instructions should the nurse give to a client with a new prosthetic mitral valve? Select all that apply.
"Expect to take prophylactic antibiotics for dental work." "Lifelong anticoagulants are necessary to prevent blood clots."
The nurse is teaching a client with a diagnosis of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and aortic valve stenosis. Which statement by the client shows that the client understands this condition?
"I should report episodes of dizziness or fainting."
A nurse is performing client health education with a 68-year-old man who has recently been diagnosed with heart failure. Which statement demonstrates an accurate understanding of his new diagnosis?
"I'm trying to think of ways that I can cut down the amount of salt that I usually eat."
A client who has been diagnosed with mitral valve prolapse asks the nurse if there are any dietary modifications that should be incorporated into her lifestyle. The best response would be:
"Refraining from caffeine, alcohol, and cigarettes may be sufficient to control symptoms."
A client in the nursing home wonders why he is having these signs and symptoms of left-sided heart failure. Which explanation will the nurse give the client?
"The left ventricle is having problems pumping blood forward, and this is causing blood to back up into your lungs."
What should the nurse teach the client prior to ergometry?
"This test evaluates cardiac function."
In hypovolemic shock, renal perfusion and urinary output decline. The nurse will monitor urinary output and knows that output below which level indicates inadequate renal perfusion?
20 mL/hour
The nurse is monitoring hourly urine output of a client diagnosed with hypovolemic shock. The nurse is most concerned if the client's output is:
20 mL/hour
Four clients were admitted to the emergency department with severe chest pain. All were given preliminary treatment with aspirin, morphine, oxygen, and nitrates and were monitored by ECG. Which client most likely experienced myocardial infarction?
80-year-old woman whose pain was not relieved by nitrates or rest; the ECG showed ST-segment elevation with inverted T waves and abnormal Q waves; levels of cardiac markers subsequently rose
ST-elevated myocardial infarction (STEMI) is accompanied by severe, crushing pain. Morphine is the drug of choice used to treat the pain of STEMI when the pain cannot be relieved with oxygen and nitrates. Why is morphine considered the drug of choice in STEMI?
Action decreases metabolic demands of the heart.
When trying to educate a client about the release of free radicals and the role they play in formation of atherosclerosis, which statement is most accurate?
Activated cells that release free radicals oxidize LDL, which is harmful to the lining of your blood vessels.
A client with a diagnosis of chronic renal failure secondary to diabetes has seen a gradual increase in her blood pressure over the past several months, culminating in a diagnosis of secondary hypertension. Which factor has most likely resulted in the client's increased blood pressure?
Activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone mechanism
A client is transported to the emergency department in respiratory distress after eating peanuts. The following interventions are ordered by the health care provider. Which intervention should the nurse complete first?
Administer epinephrine (adrenaline).
A client is rushed to the emergency department with assessment findings of urticaria, wheezing, chest tightness, and difficulty breathing. The client is most likely experiencing which type of shock?
Anaphylactic
A child's history of a recurrent sore throat followed by severe knee and ankle pain has resulted in a diagnostic workup and a diagnosis of rheumatic fever. What are the treatment priorities for this child?
Antibiotics and anti-inflammatory drugs
Regarding the various forms of heart failure, the nurse knows that which statements are correct? Select all that apply.
Aortic stenosis can cause left-sided failure. Cardiomyopathy is a common cause of heart failure. Compensated heart failure may be clinically asymptomatic.
The nurse knows that acute regulation of blood pressure involves which physiologic processes? Select all that apply.
Arterial chemoreceptors Vagal nerve impulses Adrenergic (sympathetic) stimulation Carotid baroreceptors
The nurse is preparing to auscultate for a mitral valve stenosis murmur. Where is the best location to place the stethoscope?
At the apex of the heart
Following several weeks of increasing fatigue and a subsequent diagnostic workup, a client has been diagnosed with mitral valve regurgitation. Failure of this heart valve would have which hemodynamic consequences?
Backflow from the left ventricle to left atrium
A nurse educator explains a type of cardiac condition as "a heterogeneous group of diseases of the myocardium associated with mechanical and/or electrical dysfunction that usually exhibit inappropriate ventricular hypertrophy or dilation and often lead to cardiovascular death or progressive heart failure." Which condition fits this definition?
Cardiomyopathy
Which statements regarding heart failure in older adults are true? Select all that apply.
Causes of heart failure in older adults include coronary heart disease and mitral valve dysfunction. Sensitivity of beta-adrenergic receptors decreases, resulting in decreased ventricular contractility. It is more difficult to diagnose because of underlying chronic diseases.
The nurse anticipates that which client would be considered a good candidate for coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG)?
Client who failed a percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and has a history of myocardial infarction (MI) experiencing new-onset pain and ST elevation
What should the nurse teach the pregnant woman about congenital heart defects?
Congenital heart defects occur between the 3rd and 8th weeks of development before you know you are pregnant.
Chronic stable angina, associated with inadequate blood flow to meet the metabolic demands of the myocardium, is caused by:
Fixed coronary obstruction
The nursing instructor is teaching her nursing students about cardiac function and different heart diseases. Which disease does she tell the students is caused by calcified scar tissue that develops between the visceral and parietal layers of the serous pericardium?
Constrictive pericarditis
An older adult woman presents arrives in the emergency department after fainting at the funeral of a loved one. She is diagnosed with shock as a result of impaired sympathetic outflow based on which clinical manifestations? Select all that apply.
Dry, warm skin Bradycardia
Angina pectoris is a chronic ischemic CAD that is characterized by a symptomatic paroxysmal chest pain or pressure sensation associated with transient myocardial ischemia. What precipitates an attack of angina pectoris?
Emotional stress
The nurse will monitor the client for which possible respiratory manifestations of heart failure? Select all that apply.
Exertional dyspnea Orthopnea Cheyne-Stokes respiration Chronic, dry cough
A client who has been admitted to the emergency room with symptoms of a STEMI is given nitroglycerine. The nurse explains to the client's wife that this medication is given for which reason? Select all that apply.
For its vasodilation effect To relieve coronary pain
What is the most important factor in myocardial oxygen demand?
Heart rate
A health care provider suspects a client has heart failure. Which diagnostic procedure would give the staff information about pulmonary capillary pressures, which will lead to the most appropriate interventions?
Hemodynamic monitoring
The health care provider is discussing major risk factors for coronary artery disease (CAD) with a client. The most important information for the provider to include would be:
History of cigarette smoking and elevated blood pressure
A 17-year-old athlete died suddenly during a track meet and it was subsequently determined that he had heart disease. Which condition was the most likely cause of his heart failure?
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
A young college football player was bought to the emergency room after collapsing on the football field during practice. When arriving he was unconscious and his ECG was abnormal. Subsequently he died after arresting in the emergency room. What does the physician suspect is the likely cause of this?
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
Football fans at a college have been shocked to learn of the sudden death of a star player, an event that was attributed in the media to "an enlarged heart." Which disorder was the player's most likely cause of death?
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM)
The nurse must achieve which clinical objectives for a client in cardiogenic shock? Select all that apply.
Improve cardiac output Regulate blood volume Increase coronary perfusion Correct pulmonary edema
In a client with hypovolemic shock, which assessment findings alert the nurse that compensatory mechanisms are attempting to support cardiac output. Select all that apply.
Increased heart rate Vasoconstriction Activitation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS)
A 60-year-old woman is hospitalized after losing an extensive amount of blood in a work-related accident. She tells the nurse that she heard the doctor say that she would keep feeling faint until her brain made more blood. The nurse recognizes that when the woman's blood pressure dropped, the pressure in her carotid arteries decreased. This was detected by baroreceptors in the carotid arteries, with which subsequent effect?
Increased sympathetic stimulation of the heart and blood vessels
A child is suspected to have heart failure. The nurse knows that which statements regarding heart failure in children are most accurate? Select all that apply.
Inotropic agents such as digoxin may be used in children. Congenital defects are a risk factor. Symptoms include tachypnea and tachycardia.
A newborn is diagnosed with Tetralogy of Fallot. Prior to surgery, which abnormality should be corrected to prevent a stroke?
Iron deficiency anemia
Anaphylactic shock is the most severe form of systemic allergic reaction. Immunologically medicated substances are released into the blood, causing vasodilation and an increase in capillary permeability. What physiologic response often follows the vascular response in anaphylaxis?
Laryngeal edema
When teaching about heart attacks, the nursing instructor tells the students that most heart attacks (approximately 40 to 50 percent) affect which coronary artery?
Left anterior descending artery
The nurse has just completed teaching a client about acyanotic congenital heart disease. The nurse determines that teaching was effective when the client states the blood is shunted to which part of the body?
Left side of the heart to the right side of the heart
A client has arrived in the emergency department in cardiogenic shock. Which assessment findings by the nurse would confirm this diagnosis? Select all that apply.
Less than 5 mL dark, concentrated urine in the past hour BP reading of 80/65 Difficult to arouse with changes in level of consciousness
A client is admitted for observation due to abnormal heart sounds, pulmonary congestion, nocturnal paroxysmal dyspnea, and orthopnea. Upon auscultation a low-pitched, rumbling murmur, best heard at the apex of the heart, is also heard. Which condition does the client likely have?
Mitral valve stenosis
The nurse working in the emergency room triages a client who comes in reporting chest pain, shortness of breath, sweating and elevated anxiety. The physician suspects a myodardial infarction. The client is given a nitrate, which does nothing for his pain. Which medication should the nurse suspect the doctor will order next for the pain?
Morphine
A nurse is assessing for cyanosis in a child who has a congenital heart defect. Select the mostimportant area for the nurse to assess.
Mucous membranes
A client has developed left-sided heart failure. Which symptom might have precipitated this condition?
Myocardial infarction
A client who developed a deep vein thrombosis during a prolonged period of bed rest has deteriorated as the clot has dislodged, resulting in a pulmonary embolism. Which type of shock is this client at risk of experiencing?
Obstructive shock
A client with a long history of stable angina suddenly experiences substernal pain that radiates to the left arm, neck, and jaw. He describes the pain as severe and feels as if he is suffocating. He has taken nitroglycerin and not experienced any relief. The client is most likely experiencing:
Onset of STEMI
A client is seen in the emergency room reporting sharp chest pain that started abruptly. He says it has radiated to his neck and abdomen. He also states that it is worse when he takes a deep breath or swallows. He tells the nurse that when he sits up and leans forward the pain is better. Upon examination the nurse notes a pericardial friction rub and some EKG changes. Which disease should the nurse suspect this client to have?
Pericarditis
On a holiday trip home, the nurse's mother states that the nurse's father was diagnosed with right-sided heart failure. Which manifestation exhibited by the father does the nurse know might have preceded this diagnosis?
Peripheral edema, weight gain
The client's ultrasound shows a thrombus in the venous sinus in the soleus muscle. The nurse explains that early treatment is important to prevent:
Pulmonary embolism
A teenager is seen in the emergency room with reports of a sore throat, headache, fever, abdominal pain, and swollen glands. His mother tells the nurse that he was seen 3 weeks before in the clinic and treated with antibiotics for strep throat. He was better for a few days but now he seems to have gotten worse in the last 2 days. What should the nurse suspect is wrong with this client?
Rheumatic fever
A 20-year-old college student being treated for a kidney infection developed a temperature of 104ºF (40°C) in spite of treatment with antibiotics. Her pulse was high, her blood pressure was low, and her skin was hot, dry, and flushed. The nurse knows that this client most likely is experiencing which type of shock?
Septic
The nurse should anticipate administering intravenous antibiotic therapy as a priority to a client experiencing which type of shock?
Septic shock
Which condition does the nurse know can lead to right-sided heart failure?
Severe pneumonia
The plaques in a client's coronary arteries are plentiful, and most have small- to moderate-sized lipid cores with thick fibrous caps. This form of atherosclerosis is most closely associated with which diagnosis?
Stable angina
What is the primary cause of heart failure in infants and children?
Structural heart defects
Select the client who may be at risk for developing an increased resistance to blood flow.
The client in hypovolemic shock experiencing extreme dehydration
The health care provider is reviewing lab results of a client diagnosed with heart failure. The provider notes that the client's ANP and BNP levels have been increasing and remain significantly elevated. These results would be interpreted as:
The condition is getting progressively worse.
The nursing instructor is teaching the students about rheumatic fever. She tells the students that it is an important cause of heart disease and is very serious mainly for which reason?
The disabling effects that result from involvement of heart valves
A client has just been admitted to the cardiac intensive care unit with a diagnosis of infective endocarditis. His wife appears distraught and asks the nurse what caused this to happen to her husband. What would be the nurse's best response?
The most common cause is a staph infection
A neonate is born with a congenital heart defect. The nurse realizes this defect most likely originated during which week of development?
The third week of development
A client has been diagnosed with aortic stenosis and asks the nurse what this means. The mostappropriate response would be:
The valve opening is narrowed and produces increased resistance to blood flow out of the left ventricle and into the aorta.
In infective endocarditis, vegetative lesions grow on the valves of the heart. These vegetative lesions consist of a collection of infectious organisms and cellular debris enmeshed in the fibrin strands of clotted blood. What are the possible systemic effects of these vegetative lesions?
They can fragment and cause cerebral emboli.
Which serum biomarker is highly specific for myocardial tissue?
Troponin
A client with a suspected MI is brought to the emergency department by ambulance. The nurse caring for this client would expect to receive an order for which laboratory test to confirm a diagnosis of MI?
Troponin level
A client is told that she has cardiac valve leaflets, or cusps, that are floppy and fail to shut completely, permitting blood flow even when the valve should be completely closed. The nurse knows that this condition can lead to heart failure and is referred to as:
Valvular regurgitation
A 66-year-old obese man with diagnoses of ischemic heart disease has been diagnosed with heart failure that his care team has characterized as attributable to systolic dysfunction. Which assessment finding is inconsistent with his diagnosis?
Ventricular dilation and wall tension are significantly lower than normal.
A telehealth nurse is talking with a client who has a history of right-sided heart failure. The nurse should question the client about which assessment finding that would indicate the client's condition is worsening?
Weight gain
A 45-year-old client is undergoing exercise stress testing. At which point will the test be halted and not allowed to continue?
When the client experiences chest pain
A 20-year-old male client is experiencing a severe immunologically mediated reaction in which histamines have been released into the blood. Which type of reaction is most likely occurring with this client?
anaphylatic shock
Mitral valve prolapse occurs frequently in the population at large. Its treatment is aimed at relieving the symptoms and preventing complications of the disorder. Which drug is used in the treatment of mitral valve prolapse to relieve symptoms and aid in preventing complications?
beta-adrenergic blocking drugs (beta-blockers)
An older adult client has been diagnosed with chronic heart failure. He is prescribed an ACE inhibitor to treat the symptoms and improve his quality of life. This drug will alleviate the client's symptoms of heart failure by:
blocking the conversion of angiotensin I to angiotensin II.
The pathophysiology of heart failure involves an interaction between decreased pumping ability and the ________ to maintain cardiac output.
compensatory mechanisms
The health care provider has determined that a client diagnosed with cardiogenic shock will now require treatment with the intra-aortic balloon pump. The expected effect of the treatment is:
decreased afterload.
Cardiac tamponade and pericardial effusion can be life-threatening when the pericardial sac _______ and ______ the heart.
fills rapidly; compresses
The health care team is developing a plan of care for a client diagnosed with congestive heart failure (CHF). The primary treatment goal would be:
improving quality of life by relieving symptoms.
A client has been experiencing increasing fatigue in recent months, a trend that has prompted an echocardiogram. The results suggest that the client's end-diastolic volume is insufficient. Which parameter of cardiac performance will directly decrease as a result of this finding?
preload
A preventive measure to decrease the risk of developing rheumatic heart disease includes:
prompt diagnosis of streptococcal infections with a throat culture.
While teaching a client with new-onset right-sided heart failure, the nurse should educate the client to monitor for fluid accumulation by:
recording weight every day at the same time with same type of clothing.
Assessment of an older adult client reveals bilateral pitting edema of the client's feet and ankles; difficult to palpate pedal pulses; breath sounds clear on auscultation; oxygen saturation level of 93% (0.93); and vital signs normal. What is this client's most likely health problem?
right-sided heart failure
A client who is experiencing angina at rest that has been increasing in intensity should be instructed to:
see the doctor for evaluation immediately.
Severe shock can be followed by acute lung injury/acute respiratory distress syndrome (ALI/ARDS) characterized by:
ventilation-perfusion mismatch.
A client with heart failure asks, "Why am I taking a 'water pill' when it's my heart that is having a problem?" While educating the client about the Frank-Starling mechanism, which explanation is most appropriate to share?
"Since your heart is not pumping efficiently, the kidneys are getting less blood flow; therefore, the kidneys are holding on to sodium and water."
A client awaiting a heart transplant is experiencing decompensation of her left ventricle that will not respond to medications. The physicians suggest placing the client on a ventricular assist device (VAD). The client asks what this equipment will do. The health care providers respond:
"This device will decrease the workload of the myocardium while maintaining cardiac output and systemic arterial pressure."
Which description sums up the basic pathophysiology of heart failure that the nurse would include when educating a client?
Low cardiac output due to reduced pumping ability
Which manifestation of left-sided heart failure can be diagnosed by examination of the lips and mucous membranes?
Cyanosis
A client asks the purpose of an exercise stress test. What is the nurse's best response?
"The test is used to measure functional status during stress."
Increased secretion of renin in heart failure is caused by which event?
Low cardiac output
A client diagnosed with giant cell arteritis will likely experience pain located in which region of the head?
Temporal
A client's blood pressure is persistently in the range of 130 to 135 mm Hg systolic and 85 to 88 mm Hg diastolic. The nurse knows that the client's blood pressure would be classified as ________ according to American Heart Association guidelines?
stage 1 hypertension
in hypovolemic shock, renal perfusion and urinary output decline. The nurse will monitor urinary output and knows that output below which level indicates inadequate renal perfusion?
20 mL/hour
Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) is a treatment modality for which disorder of cardiac function?
Atherosclerosis and unstable angina
Dysrhythmias can occur in clients with heart failure. The dysrhythmia that occurs most frequently in heart failure is:
Atrial fibrillation
A client diagnosed with diastolic heart failure asks the nurse to explain why this has developed. The nurse knows that which conditions are often associated with diastolic failure? Select all that apply.
Constrictive pericarditis Myocardial hypertrophy Ischemic heart disease
A nurse is assessing a client in shock for complications of acute renal failure. Which assessment is priority for the nurse to obtain?
Continuously measuring urine output
When an acute MI occurs, many physiologic changes occur very rapidly. What causes the loss of contractile function of the heart within seconds of the onset of an MI?
Conversion from aerobic to anaerobic metabolism
Nearly everyone with pericarditis has chest pain. With acute pericarditis, the pain is abrupt in onset, sharp, and radiates to the neck, back, abdomen, or sides. What can be done to ease the pain of acute pericarditis?
Have the client sit up and lean forward.
A nurse is caring for a client following surgery. The central venous pressure (CVP) monitor indicates low pressures. Which action is a priority for the nurse to take?
Increase the IV fluid infusion per protocol.
An 86-year-old client is disappointed to learn that he or she has class II heart failure despite a lifelong commitment to exercise and healthy eating. Which age-related change predisposes older adults to the development of heart failure?
Increased vascular stiffness
Which intervention will the nurse anticipate being prescribed to treat an adult admitted to the ICU with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS)?
Increasing oxygen concentration in the inspired air
A client has just been told that he has an infection of the inner surface of the heart. He is also told that the bacteria has invaded his heart valves. What term is used for this disease process?
Infective endocarditis
A 22-year-old man is experiencing hypovolemic shock following a fight in which his carotid artery was cut with a broken bottle. Which immediate treatments are likely to most benefit the man?
Infusion of normal saline or Ringer's lactate to maintain the vascular space.
The most recent blood work of a client with a diagnosis of heart failure indicates increased levels of atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) and brain natriuretic peptide (BNP). What is the most likely effect of these peptides on the client's physiology?
Inhibition of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system
The student attends a health fair and has his serum cholestrol checked. He has a high lipoprotein level (LDL). He understands which of the following about LDL cholesterol?
It is believed to play an active role in the pathogenesis of the atherosclerotic lesion.
The nurse administers nitroglycerin to a client with acute coronary syndrome. Which explanation is the best rationale for this intervention?
Limiting the size of the infarction
When the electrocardiogram (ECG) of a client in the emergency department indicates an ST elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) in progress, the physician orders a beta-adrenergic blocker. Which factors in the client's history will cause the nurse to withhold medication pending discussion with physician? Select all that apply.
Myocardial infarction caused by cocaine use Third-degree heart block Shock
A client is at high risk for the development of rheumatic heart disease. The most important information for the nurse to provide would be
Prompt diagnosis and treatment of streptococcal infections
A 60-year-old woman who has lost an extensive amount of blood in a work-related accident says that when her blood pressure was checked in the hospital, the top number (systolic pressure) was lower than usual but the bottom number (diastolic pressure) was about the same. The nurse recognizes that which reason accounts for this lack of change in the diastolic pressure?
Systemic vasoconstriction maintained the diastolic pressure.
How can the health care provider determine if the client has "aerobic fitness"?
Tests help to determine aerobic fitness by measuring heart rate while under the stress of exercise.
While studying the physiology of the heart, the nursing students have learned that which of the following influence the blood flow in the coronary vessels that supply the myocardium? Select all that apply.
The aortic pressure Autoregulatory mechanisms Compression of the intramyocardial vessels
A client comes to the emergency room with all the symptoms of a myodardial infarction. Which lab value, known to have a high specificity for myocardial tissue considered the primary biomarker test for diagnosing an MI, does the nurse suspect the physician will order?
Troponin assays
An older adult client asks the nurse why so many older people develop heart failure. The bestresponse would be increased:
Vascular stiffness
Levels of endothelins may be increased in clients with heart failure. Which of the following is the primary action of endothelins?
Vasoconstriction
A client who lives with angina pectoris has taken a sublingual dose of nitroglycerin to treat the chest pain he experiences while mowing his lawn. This drug facilitates release of nitric oxide, which will have what physiologic effect?
Vasodilating effects reducing preload and afterload
A person with blood pressure of 68/38 fainted after donating a unit of blood. The blood bank technician stated that the person was experiencing low preload from loss of blood volume. The nurse knows that preload refers to which of the following?
Venous return to the heart
A client who experienced an ST elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) received fibrinolytic therapy with streptokinase. Which manifestation alerts the nurse to a developing complication?
Decreased level of consciousness
A 30-year-old client arrives with these vital signs: Blood pressure 50/30 mm Hg, pulse 100 beats/min, respiratory rate 12 breaths/min, temperature 101°F (38.3°C). The nurse interprets these results as the client being in shock based on which reading?
Low blood pressure
Following cardiac surgery, the nurse suspects the client may be developing a cardiac tamponade. Which clinical manifestations would support this diagnosis? Select all that apply
Muffled heart tones Narrowed pulse pressure Low BP—84/60 mm Hg
A client has many residual health problems related to compromised circulation following recovery from septic shock. The nurse knows which complications listed below are a result of being diagnosed with septic shock and therefore should be assessed frequently? Select all that apply.
Profound dyspnea due to acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) Atelectasis resulting in injury to endothelial lining of pulmonary vessels, which allows fluid/plasma to build up in alveolar spaces Acute renal failure due to decreased/impaired renal perfusion as a result of low BP
A client is at high risk for the development of rheumatic heart disease. The most important information for the nurse to provide would be:
Prompt diagnosis and treatment of streptococcal infections
A nurse is evaluating hypertension risk factors with a black male who is a lawyer in a busy legal firm. He reports that he eats fairly well, usually having red meat and potatoes daily. His father and older brother have hypertension. His paternal grandfather had a stroke. The lawyer drinks about four beers and eats salted popcorn while watching television in the evening and has gained 15 lb (6.8 kg) in the past year. Which risk factors or hypertension are nonmodifiable? Select all that apply.
Race Family history
A nurse preceptor is evaluating the skills of a new registered nurse (RN) caring for clients experiencing shock. Which action by the new RN indicates a need for more education?
Raising the head of the bed to a high Fowler's position
A client who is relatively healthy is seen in the clinic for a regular checkup. While there he tells the nurse that he is worried that he may develop a heart condition. When the nurse asks him why he is worried he tells her that his mother had aortic valve stenosis and is afraid that he might get it. He then asks to be tested for the disease. What should the nurse tell this client about diagnosing a valvular defect?
Valvular defects usually are detected through cardiac auscultation.