Skin Breakdown and Pressure Injuries
Burns
Parkland Formula
Nursing Diagnoses and Goals
Skin Disorders
Skin Lesions
Skin Cancer
100

Earliest sign of a pressure injury

What is non-blanchable redness?

100

Burn affecting only the epidermis.

What is a superficial burn?

100

TBSA stands for this.

What is total body surface area?

100

Common nursing diagnosis for skin breakdown.

What is impaired skin integrity?

100

Silvery Scale plaques.

What is psoriasis?

100

A flat, non-palpable change in skin color.

What is a macule?

100

The most common type of skin cancer.

What is basal cell carcinoma?

200

Partial-thickness skin loss with blistering.

What is Stage 2 pressure injury?

200

Burn with blisters and severe pain.

What is partial-thickness burn?

200

What is the formula developed by Parkland?

What is 4m?l X weight in kg X %TBSA burned

200

Diagnosis related to burn fluid loss.

What is deficient fluid volume?

200

Mite infestation causing itching.

What is scabies?

200

A raised, solid lesion less than 1 cm.

What is a papule?

200

This skin cancer often appears as a scaly lesion.

What is squamous cell carcinoma?

300

Full-thickness skin loss with visible fat.

What is Stage 3 pressure injury?

300

Burn destroying all skin layers, possibly painless.

What is a full-thickness burn?

300

When is half the fluid given?

What is the first 8 hours?

300

Goal for wound healing.

What is no signs of infection?

300

Bacterial infection with honey-colored crust.

What is impetigo?

300

A fluid-filled lesion less than 1 cm.

What is a vesicle?

300

The most dangerous form of skin cancer.

What is melanoma?

400

Full-thickness skin loss with exposed bone, tendon, or muscle.

What is Stage 4 pressure injury?

400

Priority in the first 24 hours post-burn.

What is fluid resuscitation?

400

The remaining fluid is given over?

What is the next 16 hours?

400

Intervention to prevent infection.

What is aseptic technique?

400

Fungal infection with ring shape.

What is tinea?

400

A pus-filled lesion.

What is a pustule?

400

This rule helps assess suspicious moles.

What is the ABCDE rule?

500

Tool used to assess pressure injury risk.

What is the Braden Scale?

500

Most critical complication in facial/neck burns.

What is airway obstruction?

500

What fluid is commonly used in the Parkland formula?

What is Lactated Ringers?

500

Priority pain management route in major burns?

What is IV route?

500

Painful vesicular rash along nerves.

What is shingles?

500

A large fluid-filled blister greater than 1 cm.

What is a bulla?

500

Major risk factor for skin cancer.

What is UV exposure?

600

Priority intervention for a patient who is immobile and incontinent.

What is frequent repositioning and moisture management?

600

Why are burn patients at high risk for infection?

What is loss of protective skin barrier?

600

Why is urine output monitored closely during fluid resuscitation?

What is to assess kidney perfusion and fluid status?

600

Why avoid IM injections in burn patients?

What is unpredictable absorption?

600

Chronic itching inflammatory condition often lined to allergies.

What is eczema (atopic dermatitis)?

600

A deep loss of skin extending into the dermis.

What is an ulcer?

700

Why should you not massage reddened areas over bony prominences?

What is it can worsen tissue damage?

700

Expected urine output indicating adequate perfusion in burn patients.

What is at least 30 ml/hr?

700

60kg patient with burns to 10% of TBSA, how much fluid will be given over the first 24 hours?

What is 2400 ml?

700

Two interventions to prevent contractures in burn patients.

What is range-of-motion exercises and splinting?

700

A patient on antibiotics develops widespread rash, mucosal lesions, and fever, What is suspected?

What is Stevens-John Syndrome

700

A solid, elevated lesion greater than 1 cm.

What is a nodule?

800

A wound covered in slough where depth cannot be determined is classified as?

What is an unstageable pressure injury?

800

A burn patient develops dark urine and muscle pain after an electrical burn, what complication is suspected?

What is rhabdomyolysis?

800

If a patient arrives 2 hours after a burn, how does this affect fluid timing?

What is fluids are adjusted to be given in reference to the time of the burn.

800

A burn patient becomes confused with decreasing Blood Pressure, what is the priority nursing action?

What is notify provider and anticipate an order for an increase in IV fluid volume?

800

What is the nurse's first action if Steven Johnson Syndrome is suspected?

Stop the prescribed antibiotic.

900

Two priority nursing diagnoses in Stevens Johnson Syndrome.

What is impaired skin integrity or risk for infection?

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