Fluids & Volume Status
Electrolytes & EKG Danger
Respiratory Emergencies (PE/PNA/TB)
COPD/Asthma & Oxygen
GI + Nutrition + Metabolic
100

Name two expected findings with fluid volume deficit.

Tachycardia, hypotension/orthostatic hypotension, dry mucous membranes, poor skin turgor, decreased UOP, concentrated urine.

100

What’s the priority first step for a K⁺ of 6.8?

Place on cardiac monitor (life-threatening dysrhythmias).

100

Pneumonia patient gets worse dyspnea + low SpO₂—priority action?

Administer oxygen (ABCs).

100

COPD: what breathing technique reduces air trapping?

Pursed-lip breathing.

100

GERD lifestyle: name two.

Elevate HOB, avoid spicy/acidic/caffeine/alcohol, small meals, avoid lying down after eating, weight loss if needed.

200

Which lab/assessment best suggests dehydration?

Increased urine specific gravity and/or rising Hct/BUN.

200

Name one med that stabilizes the cardiac membrane in severe hyperkalemia.

IV calcium gluconate.

200

PE: sudden dyspnea + SpO₂ 88%—priority?

Oxygen + rapid provider notification/rapid response per policy.

200

COPD on O2 becomes drowsy with decreased respiratory effort—priority?

Reduce O2 to ordered target + assess for CO₂ retention (check ABG if ordered).

200

Barrett’s esophagus—why are follow-ups important?

Risk for dysplasia/esophageal cancer → needs surveillance endoscopy.

300

Which finding is most concerning in fluid volume overload?

Crackles, dyspnea, worsening oxygenation (pulmonary edema risk).

300

Name one intervention that shifts potassium into cells.

IV insulin + dextrose (also albuterol, sodium bicarb in some cases).

300

Gold standard”/best confirmatory test commonly used for PE?

CT pulmonary angiography (CTPA).

300

Best test to confirm COPD airflow limitation?

Spirometry / FEV1 (↓).

300

PUD sign of upper GI bleed?

Melena (black, tarry stools).

400

Define third spacing and name one condition that causes it.

Fluid shifts into interstitial/“trapped” spaces (not usable by circulation). Causes: burns, sepsis, pancreatitis, liver failure/cirrhosis.

400

Sodium 128 (hyponatremia): what serious neuro symptom do you watch for?

Confusion, seizures.

400

Active TB: which isolation and which mask for staff?

Airborne isolation + N95/respirator.

400

Chronic bronchitis patho behind cough + infections + cyanosis?

Mucus hypersecretion + airway inflammation.

400

Billroth II patient dizzy/sweaty/palpitations after eating = ? and first teaching?

Dumping syndrome; small frequent meals, limit simple carbs, higher protein/fat, lie down after meals if instructed, fluids between meals.

500

Priority nursing action when suspecting acute pulmonary edema from overload?

High Fowler’s, apply O2, notify provider/prepare diuretics (ABCs).

500

Refeeding syndrome: which electrolyte drops and can cause respiratory failure?

Phosphate (hypophosphatemia).

500

TB teaching: what is the BIG adherence point?

Complete the full medication course (months), even if symptoms improve (prevents resistance).

500

Asthma teaching—what statement is WRONG?

I will use my rescue inhaler every day to prevent attacks. (Rescue = PRN; controller meds prevent).

500

Metabolic syndrome: name 3 common components

Central obesity (↑ waist), ↑ BP, ↑ fasting glucose, ↑ triglycerides, low HDL.

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