PAD
PVD
HF
Nursing management
Critical Thinking
100

True or False – arterial ulcers take more time to heal vs venous ulcers

true

100

Where do Venous Stasis Ulcers occur?

Lower legs/ankles

100

Which class of heart failure is slight limits on activity, ordinary limits causes fatigue, dyspnea?

Class II

100

What is a non-pharmacological way to prevent DVT?

Early ambulation, ted hose, SCDs

100

A nurse is monitoring a client who just had a below-the-knee amputaion and is complaining of feeling a burning, crushing pain in the part of the limb that is missing. What is this called?

Phantom pain

200

What is the most common cause of PAD?

Atherosclerosis

200

Long-Term oral anticoagulation medication for DVT?

Warfarin

200

Which side of the heart is failing when they have symptoms of dyspnea, cough, and crackles in lungs?

Left-sided heart failure

200

What is the difference between an antiplatelet and an anticoagulant?

Antiplatelets: inhibit platelet aggregation (stop platelets from clumping)

Anticoagulant: interfere with the protein responsible for blood clotting

200

A nurse is assessing a client who has a painful wound that has a punched-out appearance on the lateral surface of their ankle. What are these a symptom of?

Arterial ulcer

300

What are 2 risk factors associated with PAD?

Diets high in fat, stress, smoking, sedentary lifestyle

300

A clot causing vein inflammation?

Thrombophlebitis

300

Release of Brain Natriuretic Peptides (BNP) results in:

Diaresis and vasodilation

300

Name one pharmacological intervention used for DVT

Warfarin, Lovenox, Heparin, Eliquis (apixaban), ASA

300

A nurse is assessing a client who has DVT and needs surgery. The client is scheduled to have an inferior vena cava filter inserted, what does this do?

It is inserted via the femoral vein and passed into the inferior vena cava where it traps emboli before they progress to the lungs.

400

What is the pathophysiology of PAD?

Progressive, chronic condition of obstructed blood flow through larger peripheral arteries

400

What is the name of the DVT Prediction Assessment?

Wells score

400

What is a normal ejection fraction? (%)

55-70%

400

How should a pt. on warfarin adjust their diet to promote effectiveness of the drug? (avoid what vitamin?)

Avoid foods rich in vitamin K

400

You are giving educa=on to a client who is taking Warfarin as a long-term oral an=coagula=on for their DVT. What is one important symptom of taking Warfarin that the nurse should monitor and educate the client about repor=ng?

Excessive bleeding (blood in stool, urine, sputum)

500

What are three manifestations of PAD?

Reduced BP in the ankle, claudication, loss of hair (on lower calf, ankle, foot), diminished or absent pedal pulses, thickened toenails, and dry, scaly, dusky, pale skin

500

Measures for fibrinolysis in the blood (Clot breakdown)

 D-dimer test

500

Which antihypertensive protects against ventricular remodeling?

Ace inhibitors

500

The goal of Statins in patients with PAD is

lipid reduction; slow progression of atherosclerosis

500

A nurse is monitoring a client who has ventricular hypertrophy. The nurse should know that this can lead to what effect on the heart?

Increased size of the heart, and thickness of cardiac muscle wall can lead to cardiac muscle overwork and strain.