Medications
Lab Values
Medication Calculations
Cardiovascular Complications
Misc.
100

Name some side effects of opioid analgesics. 

constipation, hypotension, confusion, sedation, respiratory depression
100

Hematocrit (M&F)

Male: 42-52%

Female: 27-47%

100

Convert 127 lbs to kg.

57.7 kg

100

What is atherosclerosis? 

Hardening of the arteries; plaque builds up in the inner lining of the arteries. 

100

What is the order that you mix insulin? 

Humalin N: intermediate; cloudy

Humalin R: short-acting; ; clear

N-R-R-N (air-air-withdraw-withdraw)

Nancy Reagan Registered Nurse

200

What would the nurse monitor for in a patient taking spironolactone? 

hyperkalemia

200

Platelets

150,000-400,000

200

Order: Digoxin 0.5 mg PO everyday

Supply: scored tablets labeled 0.25 mg

How many tablets will you administer?

2 tabs

200

What is the first thing you as the nurse will do when your patient is experiencing chest pain?

Position the patient upright and apply supplemental O2

200

After an initial skin assessment, the nurse notices a pressure area that is reddened with a 1-cm. blister. How will the nurse document this wound stage? 

Stage 2 with a 1-cm blister noted

300

What would the nurse monitor for in a patient receiving IV heparin? 

signs of bleeding and hemorrhage (bleeding gums, nosebleed, unusual bruising, black/tarry stools, hematuria, bleeding from surgical site)

300

Neutrophils

55-70%

300

Order: diphenhydramine maleate syrup 0.025g PO q4h

Supply: liquid labeled 12.5 mg/5mL

How many mL will you administer per dose? 

10 mL

300

Identify the stages of hypertension (elevated, stage I, and Stage II)

Normal: <120/80

Elevated: 120-129/<80

Stage I: 130-139/80-89

Stage II: >140/>90

300

What are hypertonic fluids used for, and what are some examples?

Uses: cerebral edema, hyponatremia, metabolic alkalosis, maintenance fluid, hypovolemia

Examples: 5% saline, 3% saline, 5% dextrose in 0.9% saline (D5NS), 5% dextrose in 0.45% saline (D51/2NS), 5% dextrose in LR (D5LR), 10% dextrose in water (D10W)

400
What patient would the nurse expect to be taking pioglitazone? 

type 2 diabetic - used to improve the body's sensitivity to insulin, which results in glycemic control without hypoglycemia 

400

Lymphocytes

Monocytes

L: 20-40%

M: 2-8%


400

Order: Ceftazidime 1g IVPB q12h

Supply: 1g powder

Package Directions: reconstitute with 50mL D5W using a reconstitution device. Infuse over 30 minutes

Available: microdrip tubing at 10 gtt/mL

Calculate the drip rate.

17 gtt/min

400

Describe different symptoms for PAD and PVD. 

PAD: inc. cap refill, loss of hair, skin appears thin/taut/shiny, cool extremities, dec. peripheral pulses, NO edema, elevational pallor, dependent rubor; ulcers appear on bony prominences and appear "punched out" 

Venous: edema is present, dull achy pain, warm extremities, skin is pigmented brown, pruritus is common, skin is thick and hardened; ulcers appear around the medial malleolus with a large amount of drainage or yellow slough. 

400

As the nurse prepares to insert the culture swab into the wound, the nurse inadvertently touches the swab to the patients gown. What should the nurse do next? 

discard the swab, obtain a new culture swab, and collect the specimen

500

What are some adjuncts to general anesthesia, and what is the purpose of adding these different medications? 

Added to the anesthetic regimen to achieve unconsciousness, analgesia, amnesia, muscle relaxation, or autonomic nervous system control

Fentanyl (opioid): used to induce/maintain anesthesia as well as for pain control

Lorazepam and midazolam (benzodiazepines): used to reduce anxiety and induce/maintain anesthetic effects.

Ondansetron (antiemetic): used to prevent nausea/vomiting related to the procedure or medication used to achieve sedation. 

*these were the 4 meds on the study guide!

500

Eosinophils

Basophils 

E: 1-5%

B: 0.5-1%

500

Order: 250 mL D51/2NS IV KVO to be given over 12 hours

Available: microdrip tubing at 60 gtt/mL

Calculate the drip rate. 

21 gtt/min

500

Differentiate left and right-sided heart failure. 

Left: "lung"; crackles on auscultation, pleural effusion, frothy pink-tinged sputum, dry, hacking cough, orthopnea

Right: "systemic"; peripheral edema, JVD, weight gain, hepatomegaly 

500
A nurse enters her patient's room to take morning vital signs. She notes a blood pressure of 150/97, JVD, difficulty breathing, a wet cough, and crackles upon auscultation. What is the nurses next action? 

indicates circulatory overload!

the nurse will... decrease the flow rate, elevate HOB, keep the client warm, notify the HCP