Free NCLEX-RN Exam Braindumps (page: 236)

Page 236 of 431

Following her surgery, a 5-year-old child will return to the pediatric unit with a long-arm cast. She experienced a supracondylar fracture of the humerus near the elbow. Which nursing action is most essential during the first 24 hours after surgery and cast application?

  1. Mobilization of the child
  2. Discharge teaching
  3. Pain management
  4. Assessment of neurovascular status

Answer(s): D

Explanation:

(A) Mobilization is important but not absolutely essential. (B) Discharge teaching should be initiated prior to surgery as well as during the postoperative period. (C) Assessment and management of pain are necessary and high in priority. (D) Neurovascular status of the extremity is of primary importance. The risk of circulatory impairment exists with any cast application. This type of fracture is common in children. A high incidence of neurovascular complications exists with fractures near the elbow.



Following her surgery, a 5-year-old child will return to the pediatric unit with a long-arm cast. She experienced a supracondylar fracture of the humerus near the elbow. Which nursing action is most essential during the first 24 hours after surgery and cast application?

  1. Mobilization of the child
  2. Discharge teaching
  3. Pain management
  4. Assessment of neurovascular status

Answer(s): D

Explanation:

(A) Mobilization is important but not absolutely essential. (B) Discharge teaching should be initiated prior to surgery as well as during the postoperative period. (C) Assessment and management of pain are necessary and high in priority. (D) Neurovascular status of the extremity is of primary importance. The risk of circulatory impairment exists with any cast application. This type of fracture is common in children. A high incidence of neurovascular complications exists with fractures near the elbow.



A 68-year-old client developed acute respiratory distress syndrome while hospitalized for pneumonia. After a respiratory arrest, an endotracheal tube was inserted. Several days later, numerous attempts to wean him from mechanical ventilation were ineffective, and a tracheostomy was created. For the first 24 hours following tracheostomy, it is important to minimize bleeding around the insertion site. The nurse can accomplish this by:

  1. Deflating the cuff for 10 minutes every other hour instead of 5 minutes every hour
  2. Avoiding manipulation of the tracheostomy including cuff deflation
  3. Reporting any signs of crepitus immediately to the physician
  4. Changing tracheostomy dressing only as necessary using one-half strength hydrogen peroxide to cleanse the site

Answer(s): B

Explanation:

(A) The tracheal cuff should not be deflated within the first 24 hours following surgery. (B) To minimize bleeding, any manipulation, including cuff deflation, should be avoided. (C) Small amounts of crepitus are expected to occur; however, large amounts or expansion of the area of crepitus should be reported to the physician. (D) The tracheostomy site may be changed as often as necessary, but site care should be done with normal saline.



A 68-year-old client developed acute respiratory distress syndrome while hospitalized for pneumonia. After a respiratory arrest, an endotracheal tube was inserted. Several days later, numerous attempts to wean him from mechanical ventilation were ineffective, and a tracheostomy was created. For the first 24 hours following tracheostomy, it is important to minimize bleeding around the insertion site. The nurse can accomplish this by:

  1. Deflating the cuff for 10 minutes every other hour instead of 5 minutes every hour
  2. Avoiding manipulation of the tracheostomy including cuff deflation
  3. Reporting any signs of crepitus immediately to the physician
  4. Changing tracheostomy dressing only as necessary using one-half strength hydrogen peroxide to cleanse the site

Answer(s): B

Explanation:

(A) The tracheal cuff should not be deflated within the first 24 hours following surgery. (B) To minimize bleeding, any manipulation, including cuff deflation, should be avoided. (C) Small amounts of crepitus are expected to occur; however, large amounts or expansion of the area of crepitus should be reported to the physician. (D) The tracheostomy site may be changed as often as necessary, but site care should be done with normal saline.



Page 236 of 431



Post your Comments and Discuss NCLEX NCLEX-RN exam with other Community members:

Naveen Ahlam commented on November 29, 2024
Great stuff
Anonymous
upvote

Isadora Guimarães commented on November 10, 2024
Very good to study
UNITED STATES
upvote

Marydee commented on April 02, 2020
Just purchased, will see if it is the real deal. Will give a further update later!
Anonymous
upvote