Your priority for sodium imbalances
What is seizure precautions and neuro assessments?
What is symptomatic treatment?
You need to dangle the legs.
What is PAD?
Patients with this type of infection can show signs of diabetes even if they are not a diabetic.
What is chronic pancreatitis?
This disease is caused by destruction of the myelin sheaths.
What is multiple sclerosis?
The two labs closely monitored for HIV
What is CD4+ and viral load
This causes flattened t waves and in rare occasions, u waves.
Gold standard for diagnosis TB.
What is a sputum culture?
What is CAD?
The complication after a stomach surgery where the patient will experience hypoglycemia 1 hour after eating.
What is post-prandial hypoglycemia?
These foods increase uric acid.
What are liver meats, red meat, fructose corn sugar, shellfish and alcohol?
This disease process causes loss of peripheral vision.
What is glaucoma
The typical medication for hypothyroidism.
What is levothyroxine?
Pneumonia is a complication of this common infection.
What is the flu?
The typical nonpharmacological treatment for cardiac disease.
What are modifiable risk factors?
This is indicative when you assess a rigid abdomen.
What is perforation?
Bed rest of the affected joint is necessary for this disease process.
What is gout?
This is a painless event but a medical emergency with a curtain-like effect in the visual field.
What is a retinal detachment?
Name your rapid acting insulins.
What is glusline, aspart, and lispro, your GAL pals?
We encourage asthma patients to follow this plan daily.
What is the asthma treatment plan with the red, yellow, and green zones?
This rhythm can increase the risk of ventricular tachycardia.
What is frequent PVCs?
This medication coats the mucosal lining of the stomach and esophagus.
Active treatment is high dose verapamil.
What is cluster headache?
This is a skin infection that follows a dermatome and is painful vesicles on the skin.
What is shingles?
You patient is unresponsive and has a glucose reading of 40. What's your intervention?
What is push D50 and call the provider?
This causes respiratory acidosis.
What is decreased RR, holding on to CO2, opioids...?
What is atrial fibrillation?
This specific type of chronic viral hepatitis is treated with lifelong antivirals.
What is hepatitis B?
You have to avoid tyramines for these two types of headaches.
What is cluster and migraine headaches?
This is an aggressive form of nonmelanoma.
What is squamous cell carcinoma?
The duration of glargine.
What is 18-24 hours?
What are treatments for status asthmaticus?
What is magnesium, ventilation, and sedation?
When a patient is experiencing rapid ventricular rate during atrial fibrillation, these medications can be given by the BLS certified nurse.
What are beta-blockers and calcium channel blockers?
This is caused by elevated ammonia levels and causes a flapping affect of the hands.
What is asterixis?
This is caused by decreased dopamine and a complication is dementia.
What is Parkinson's Disease?
This auditory disease that is treated antihistamines and diuretics.
What is Meniere's Disease?