Hematuria, Pyuria, Proteinuria, Albuminuria, Glycosuria, and Ketonuria.
What are abnormal characteristics of urine?
A nutrient composed of amino acids that is a component of every living cell.
What is protein?
The use of this reduces or eliminates problems associated with surgery, conditions affecting the GI tract, and nourishment to clients who are NPO.
What is a Gastric or Intestinal Tube?
Blowing your nose, sneezing and coughing are all ways to...
What is stimulating the airway?
This is an oxygen delivery device in which all the exhaled air leaves the mask rather than partially entering the reservoir bag, it's designed to deliver an FiO2 of 90-100 %.
What is a non-rebreather mask?
Anuria, Oliguria, Polyuria, Nocturia, and Dysuria.
What are the abnormal urinary elimination patterns?
A graphic that proportionally shows the 5 groups of food to be eaten each day.
What is my plate?
Measuring this determines whether the rate or volume of feeding exceeds the client’s physiologic capacity.
What is Gastric Residual?
This is a drug used to treat active bronchospasms in an emergency.
What is Albuterol?
Insufficient oxygen at the cellular level.
What is hypoxia?
External, Straight, and Retention are types of this.
What are urinary catheters?
This provides numeric data to compare a person's size in relation to established norms.
What is body mass index?
Feelings of weakness, dizziness, sweating, and nausea from this syndrome of rapid deposition of calorie-dense nourishment into the small intestine.
What is dumping syndrome?
More of this helps thin mucous secretions.
What is drinking water?
This upright position eases breathing by allowing the abdominal organs to descend away from the diaphragm.
What is the Fowler's position?
A urine specimen collected in a way to avoid contamination.
What is a clean-catch specimen?
People who rely entirely on plant sources for their food.
What are vegans?
The gradual instillation of liquid nourishment via tube 4-6 times a day and administered over 30-60 minutes.
What is Intermittent Feeding?
The forms of artificial airway management.
What is an oral airway and tracheostomy?
This is a form of controlled ventilation in which the client consciously prolongs the expiration phase of breathing.
What is pursed-lip breathing?
1500-3000 mL is the normal range for this.
What is daily urinary elimination?
The five factors that affect nutritional needs.
What is age, weight/height, growth periods, activity, and health status?
Instilling a bolus of air to restore patency, turning the suction off, repositioning the client, or checking that suction pressure is 40-60 mmHg are examples of troubleshooting this.
What is a Poorly Draining Nasogastric Tube?
The four main ways to mobilize secretions.
What is percussion, vibration, postural drainage, and chest physiotherapy?
This is a gauge used to regulate the amount of oxygen delivered to the client and is attached to the oxygen source.
What is a flowmeter?