Types of Neurocognitive Disorders
Assessment and Risk Factors
Nursing Care and Safety
Pharmacology and treatment
Case Study
100

This acute, reversible condition is characterized by sudden confusion and fluctuating levels of consciousness. 

What is delirium?

100

What are risk factors for delirium?

Older age, infection, nutritional deficiencies, hepatic or renal failure, cardiovascular and respiratory disease, substance use or withdrawal, electrolyte imbalance, polypharmacy, surgery, and change in environment

100

Clients with dementia should be placed in this type of environment to reduce agitation.

What is a calm, low stimulation, and well lit environment?

100

What are cholinesterase inhibitors?

Drug class that increases acetylcholine levels in the brain by preventing its breakdown

100

Based on the scenario, what condition is Mrs. Thompson most likely experiencing?

Delirium

200

This term describes a progressive, irreversible decline in memory, judgement, and function. 

What is major neurocognitive disorder (dementia)?
200

What are risk factors for Alzheimer's disease?

Advanced age, head trauma, cardiovascular disease, lifestyle factors, and family history

200
Removing these from the home helps prevent tripping and falls

Rugs and electrical cords

200

What should the nurse monitor for when giving donepezil?

Bradycardia, syncope, fluid volume deficit

200

Which assessment findings support this diagnosis?

onset of confusion and agitation

300

This form of neurocognitive disorder is the most common and is associated with a gradual neuronal degeneration.

What is Alzheimer's Disease?

300

What is agnosia?

The inability to recognize familiar objects, even though vision is intact

300

This item helps identify clients who wander and ensures their safety

identification bracelet

300

What is an adverse effect of giving NSAIDs and cholinesterase inhibitors together?

GI bleeding

300

Which risk factors likely contribute to Mrs. Thompson's condition?

infection, advanced age, hospitalization

400

clients who have mild neurocognitive disorder may or may not progress to this more severe form of.

What is major neurocognitive disorder?

400

What is the Confusion Assessment Method (CAM)?

Tool that screens for confusion and differentiates delirium from dementia

400

clients with severe confusion should have rooms located in this area for close observation

What is near the nurses station?

400

What teaching would you give a patient who is taking donepezil?

You should take the medication before going to bed at the end of the day

400

Which nursing action should the nurse prioritize to keep Mrs. Thompson safe?

Put in a room near the nurses' station, take to restroom frequently, use bed alarm instead of restraints, put all personal belongings within reach

500

This type of dementia is caused by abnormal protein plaques and tangles that damage brain cells over time. 

What is Alzheimer's disease (neurodegenerative dementia)?

500

What is used for ruling out other causes of cognitive decline?

EEG, CT, PET scans

500

Maintaining consistent caregivers and a structured daily schedule supports this key patient need

What is consistency and orientation.

500

What is the action of memantine?

Blocks the entry of calcium into nerve cells; this slows down brain-cell death

500

What education should the nurse provide to Mrs. Thompson's condition on how delirium differs from dementia?

Delirium is sudden and reversible, dementia is gradual and irreversible

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