Vitals
Sepsis
Assessments
Shock
Stroke
100

How long should you count respirations for a patient with an irregular respiratory rhythm?

1 full minute
100

Which laboratory value is commonly monitored to assess tissue hypoperfusion and response to treatment in patients with sepsis

Lactate

100

Which body system is the first priority when assessing a patient?

Respiratory

100

What finding most strongly suggests neurogenic shock rather than hypovolemic shock?

A. Hypotension
B. Decreased cardiac output
C. Bradycardia
D. Altered mental status

Bradycardia


Because most other shock states activate the sympathetic nervous system and produce tachycardia, while neurogenic shock does the opposite due to loss of sympathetic tone.

100

What acronym do we follow for identifying stroke symptoms?

BEFAST

200
What is the minimum respiratory rate for breathing to be considered Tachypnea?

Greater than 20 breaths per minute.

200

What is often the earliest sign of septic shock in a child?

A. Hypotension
B. Bradycardia
C. Tachycardia
D. Cyanosis

Tachycardia

Children can compensate for shock for a long time. Tachycardia is often one of the earliest signs, while hypotension is a late and ominous finding.

200

Name 1 of 3 fundamental types of assessments nurses perform

Comprehensive/interval or abbreviated (BSSR)/problem-focused assessment

200

A patient presents with:

  • BP 78/42 mmHg
  • HR 48 bpm
  • Warm, dry skin
  • Recent cervical spinal injury

What type of shock

neurogenic

200
What is the goal time for door to needle for stroke patients

60 minutes

300
Scoring the Glasgow Coma scale what is the highest number a patient can be?

15

300

True or False: A patient can have sepsis without a fever.

True 

Older adults, immunocompromised patients, and critically ill patients may present with hypothermia, confusion, or weakness instead of fever, making nursing assessment crucial.

300

The Primary assessment follows what specific sequence

ABCDE

300

Name 1 of 3 types of shock

Hypovolemia, distributive (including sepsis), obstructive

300

Which assessment finding is most suggestive of a right hemispheric stroke?

Left sided neglect

400

What is the definition of oliguria

Decreased urine output of less than 400 mL in 24 hour period.

400

Which assessment finding would suggest progression from sepsis to septic shock?

A. Fever and tachycardia B. Elevated WBC count C. Hypotension despite adequate fluid resuscitation D. Positive blood cultures

C. Hypotension despite adequate fluid resuscitation

400

What is one of the earliest signs of a patient having deteroriation

Mental status changes are often the earliest sign of deterioration.

400

At what serum lactate level should a nurse become particularly concerned about severe sepsis or septic shock?

Greater than 2, trending upward 

400

A patient has sudden vision loss, aphasia, and right-sided weakness. Which side of the brain is most likely affected?

Left Hemisphere

500

What is one of the earliest vital signs to change in a deteriorating patient

Respiratory rate

500

What is the outside ICU screening tool for Sepsis?

qSOFA (Quick Sequential Organ Failure Assessment)

500

What is the deteroriation index and why is it important?

RRT at DI uses AI to notice slight changes documented in the chart that may show signs of a patient deteriorating before recognized by the team

500

Which type of shock is most likely to present with elevated jugular venous distention (JVD), hypotension, clear lung sounds

Obstructive shock (cardiac tamponade)

500

Which complication is a leading cause of mortality in stroke patients during hospitalization?

Aspiration pneumonia