Nutrition
Elimination
Tissue Integrity
Sensory Perception
Fundamental Concepts
100

Act of the body
breaking down food into simple
substances that are absorbed by
the body as nutrients or eliminated
by the body as waste.

What is digestion?

100

The normal pH range of urine.

What is 4.5 to 8.0?

100

The first stage of wound healing, where inflammation occurs.

What is the inflammatory phase?

100

The cranial nerve responsible for hearing and balance.

What is the vestibulocochlear nerve (Cranial Nerve VIII (8))?

100

The normal range for adult respiratory rate.

What is 12-20 breaths per minute?

200

Filters toxins from the blood and produces bile that breaks down carbohydrates,
proteins, and fats

What is the Liver?

200

The primary hormone responsible for water retention in the kidneys.

What is antidiuretic hormone (ADH)?

200

The type of exudate that appears thick, yellow, and contains pus.

What is purulent drainage?

200

The test used to assess visual acuity.

What is the Snellen chart?

200

The first step in the nursing process.

What is assessment?

300

The macronutrient responsible for tissue growth and repair.

What is protein?

300

A bladder training intervention for a patient experiencing urge incontinence.

What is scheduled toileting with gradual time increases between voiding?

300

A wound with full-thickness tissue loss exposing muscle or bone is classified as this stage of a pressure injury.

What is a stage 4 pressure injury?

300

This age-related condition causes the lens of the eye to lose flexibility, leading to difficulty focusing on close objects.

What is presbyopia?

300

This ethical principle refers to the duty to promote good and act in the best interest of the patient.

What is beneficence?

400

The recommended daily intake of sodium for an adult to maintain cardiovascular health.

What is less than 2,300 mg per day?

400

The name of the procedure used to remove waste products when the kidneys fail.

What is hemodialysis?

400

The intervention recommended to reduce pressure injuries in immobile patients.

What is repositioning the patient every two hours?

400

A priority nursing intervention for a patient with Meniere’s disease experiencing vertigo.

What is keeping the patient in a quiet, darkened room and avoiding sudden movements?

400

The term for the expected physiological response to a medication.

What is the therapeutic effect?

500

This condition results from prolonged thiamine (Vitamin B1) deficiency and is commonly associated with alcohol use disorder.

What is Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome?

500

This post-surgical condition causes absent bowel sounds and lack of peristalsis, leading to abdominal distention and pain.

What is paralytic ileus?

500

This type of burn involves the epidermis and dermis, causes blistering, and is very painful.

What is a second-degree (partial-thickness) burn?

500

This condition occurs due to prolonged exposure to loud noises and results in irreversible sensorineural hearing loss.

What is noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL)?

500

This emergency cardiac rhythm is characterized by a chaotic, irregular rhythm with no measurable P waves or QRS complexes, requiring immediate defibrillation.

What is ventricular fibrillation (VFib)?