Clinical Manifestations
interventions
prioritization
Med & Labs
Risk Factors
100

This triad—consisting of stasis of blood, vessel damage, and increased blood coagulability—describes the pathophysiology of DVT.

What is Virchow’s Triad?

100

Nurses should instruct patients on anticoagulants to use this type of razor to prevent skin trauma and bleeding.

What is an electric razor?

100

This is the most serious and potentially fatal complication of DVT that a nurse must monitor for, characterized by sudden shortness of breath and chest pain.

What is a Pulmonary Embolism (PE)?

100

This medication is the standard antidote for heparin overdose.

What is Protamine Sulfate?

100

This common lifestyle habit makes platelets "sticky" and is a major modifiable risk factor for impaired clotting.

What is smoking?

200

This assessment finding, though often unreliable, involves calf pain upon dorsiflexion of the foot.

What is Homans’ Sign?

200

This non-pharmacological intervention for DVT involves elevating the affected extremity above this level.

What is the level of the heart?

200

In a patient with hemophilia, any injury to this area of the body is considered a high-priority emergency due to the risk of airway obstruction or intracranial hemorrhage.

What is the head (or neck)?

200

This lab test is used to measure the effectiveness of Warfarin (Coumadin) therapy.

What is PT/INR (Prothrombin Time/International Normalized Ratio)?

200

These types of medications, often taken by women, increase the risk of hypercoagulability and DVT.

What are oral contraceptives (or hormone replacement therapy)?

300

In hemophilia, this term describes painful bleeding into the joint spaces, which can lead to chronic crippling if not treated aggressively.

What is hemarthrosis?

300

To prevent DVT in bedbound or postoperative patients, nurses should apply these two types of mechanical compression.

What are TED hose (antiembolism stockings) and SCDs (sequential compression devices)?

300

When a patient is receiving a thrombolytic like Alteplase, the nurse’s priority assessment involves frequent checks of this system to detect intracranial hemorrhage.

What is the Neurological system?

300

Patients on Warfarin must maintain a consistent intake of this vitamin to avoid fluctuations in their INR.

What is Vitamin K?

300

Hemophilia is transmitted via this specific genetic pattern, which is why it primarily affects males.

What is X-linked recessive?

400

These are the three primary physical signs often seen in an extremity affected by DVT

What are pain (tenderness), swelling (edema), and warmth?

400

When managing a joint injury in a patient with hemophilia, the nurse should use this acronym for immediate care, while being cautious with the "C" 

What is RICE (Rest, Ice, Compression, Elevation)?

400

This is the priority nursing diagnosis for a patient with hemophilia who has just experienced a fall.

What is Risk for Excessive Bleeding?

400

This specific medication is used as the primary treatment for Hemophilia A to replace what is missing.

What is Factor VIII?

400

This "age-related" risk factor increases the likelihood of venous thromboembolism, specifically for those over this age.

What is age 65?

500

What is the christmas disease?

What is Hemophilia B?

500

For a patient with deep vein thrombophlebitis, the nurse should specifically avoid this action to the affected extremity to prevent dislodging the clot

What is massaging the extremity?

500

When starting a heparin drip, the nurse must prioritize checking this lab value every 6 hours until a therapeutic range is reached.

What is aPTT (Activated Partial Thromboplastin Time)?

500

This lab test measures the residue of degrading blood clots and is often elevated in patients with DVT or PE.

What is D-dimer?

500

According to the clinical data, a 25-year-old with this specific medical device is at higher risk for DVT than an otherwise healthy 71-year-old.

What is a central venous catheter?

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