Medications
Signs,symptoms, and complications
Labs
Practice
Miscellaneous
100

Side effects include pounding headaches and orthostatic hypotension

What is nitrates

100

These clinical manifestations help differentiate between stable and unstable angina

What is if the chest pain stops with rest or nitroglycerine and if the chest pain lasts longer than 10 minutes

100

Non-specific marker of inflammation that is increased in patients with CAD

C-reactive protein

100

Which of the following symptoms would the nurse anticipate in a patient with right sided heart failure?

SATA

a. Pulmonary congestion

b. Shortness of breath

c. Neck vein distention

d. Enlarged abdominal girth

e. A third heart sound

C&D

100

Type of unstable angina that is rare and occurs at rest

What is Prinzmetal’s angina

200

medications used for myocardial infarctions

What is Morphine, Oxygen, Nitroglycerin and Asprin

200

Complications of myocardial infarction

What is 

dysrhythmias: ventricular tachycardia and ventricular fibrillation 

heart failure

200

when do tropinin levels increase, peak, and return to normal

Increase: 4-6 hours after MI

Peak: 10-24 hrs after

Normal: 10-14 days later

200

A client is receiving an infusion of t-PA, the nurse assesses the client to be disoriented to person, place and time. What action by the nurse is best?

a. Assess the client pupillary responses

b. Request neurological consultation

c. Stop the infusion and call the provider

d. Take and document a full set of vital signs

C

A change in neurologic status in a client receiving t-PA could indicate intracranial hemorrhage. The nurse should stop the infusion and notify the provider immediately. A full assessment, including pupillary responses and vital signs, occurs next. The nurse may or may not need to call a neurologist.

200

Modifiable risk factors for CAD

1. Elevated serum LDL

2. Hypertension

3. Tobacco and non-tobacco use

4. Physical inactivity

300

plavix should never be mixed with this medication because of increased risk for bleeding

what is Prilosec

300

Symptoms of left sided heart failure

Dyspnea, orthopnea, cough, hemoptysis, adventitious breath sounds, pulmonary congestion

”DO CHAP”

300

Purpose of Uric acid levels

Baseline of renal blood flow

300

A nurse assesses clients on a cardiac unit. Which client should the nurse identify as being at greatest risk for the development of left-sided heart failure?

a. A 36-year-old woman with aortic stenosis

b. A 42-year-old man with pulmonary hypertension

c. A 59-year-old woman who smokes cigarettes daily

d. A 70-year-old man who had a cerebral vascular accident

A

Although most people with heart failure will have failure that progresses from left to right, it is possible to have left-sided failure alone for a short period. It is also possible to have heart failure that progresses from right to left. Causes of left ventricular failure include mitral or aortic valve disease, coronary artery disease, and hypertension. Pulmonary hypertension and chronic cigarette smoking are risk factors for right ventricular failure. A cerebral vascular accident does not increase the risk of heart failure.


300

this angina occurs in absence of subjective symptoms, associated with diabetic neuropathy and confirmed with ECG changes 

What is silent ischemia

400

These drug classes are considered hypotensive

Diuretics, beta blockers, and ACE inhibitors

400

Fatigue, limited activities, chest congestion or cough, edema, and shortness of breath (FACES) are symptoms of?

Chronic heart failure

400

The purpose of labs for hypertension

To rule out everything for essential hypertension or find the cause of secondary hypertension

400

A nurse is teaching a client with heart failure who has been prescribed enalapril (Vasotec). Which statement should the nurse include in this clients teaching?

a. Avoid using salt substitutes.

b. Take your medication with food.

c. Avoid using aspirin-containing products. d. Check your pulse daily.

ANS: A

Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors such as enalapril inhibit the excretion of potassium. Hyperkalemia can be a life-threatening side effect, and clients should be taught to limit potassium intake. Salt substitutes are composed of potassium chloride. ACE inhibitors do not need to be taken with food and have no impact on the clients pulse rate. Aspirin is often prescribed in conjunction with ACE inhibitors and is not contraindicated.

400

Coronary artery disease usually affects which arteries

Carotid, coronary, renal iliac and femoral

500

These classification of medications should never be given to a patient who is on sexual dysfunction medication

What is nitrates and beta blockers

500

Most serious complications of Peripheral Arterial disease

Gangrene and arterial ulcers leading to amputation

500

Which lab is used to differentiate between respiratory and cardiac concerns

What is BNP 

500

A nurse is working with a client who takes atorvastatin (Lipitor). The clients recent laboratory results include a blood urea nitrogen (BUN) of 33 mg/dL and creatinine of 2.8 mg/dL. What action by the nurse is best?

a. Ask if the client eats grapefruit.

b. Assess the client for dehydration. 

c. Facilitate admission to the hospital. 

d. Obtain a random urinalysis.


A

There is a drug-food interaction between statins and grapefruit that can lead to acute kidney failure. This client has elevated renal laboratory results, indicating some degree of kidney involvement. The nurse should assess if the client eats grapefruit or drinks grapefruit juice. Dehydration can cause the BUN to be elevated, but the elevation in creatinine is more specific for a kidney injury. The client does not necessarily need to be admitted. A urinalysis may or may not be ordered.

500

Longer rest periods, longer warm up, longer period of low level activity are examples of what

Geriatric considerations for coronary artery disease treatment

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