TB basics
TB drugs
HIV
pathology
HIV treatment
Nursing actions
100

What organism causes tuberculosis

Mycobacterium tuberculosis

100

Which drug may turn urine and tears orange-red?

Rifampin

100

What type of virus is HIV?

Retrovirus (RNA virus using reverse transcriptase)

100

Main treatment approach for HIV?

Antiretroviral therapy (ART)

100

What PPE is required for active TB?

N95 respirator, gloves, gown if needed

200

How is TB transmitted?

Airborne droplets (coughing, sneezing, talking)

200

Which TB medication causes neuropathy & what prevents it?

Isoniazid (INH); Pyridoxine (Vitamin B6)

200

Which cells are destroyed by HIV?

CD4+ T lymphocytes

200

Why is ART adherence critical?

Prevents viral resistance and progression

200

How can nurses prevent HIV transmission in mothers?

No breastfeeding; encourage ART & safe delivery

300

What isolation is used for TB

Airborne isolation (negative-pressure room, N95 mask)

300

Jaundice in TB therapy means what?

Possible hepatotoxicity—check liver enzymes

300

CD4 count that defines AIDS?

<200 cells/mm³

300

What is PrEP and who uses it?

Pre-exposure prophylaxis; for HIV-negative individuals at high risk

300

Priority for AIDS with Kaposi sarcoma?

Monitor for infection, manage pain, provide psychosocial support

400

What test confirms TB?

A sputum Culture

400

During TB treatment a nurse teaches a pt to avoid?

Alcohol

400

A PT who was tested for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) after a recent exposure had a negative result. WHAT DOES THIS MEAN?

A negative test result indicates that no HIV antibodies were detected in the blood sample.

400

PT has been diagnosed with HIV. The patient does not want to take more than one antiretroviral drug. What reasons can the nurse tell the patient about for taking more than one drug?

Viral replication will be inhibited.

The major advantage of using several classes of antiretroviral drugs is that viral replication can be inhibited in several ways

400

PT ask nurse how long they must take their TB medications?

The nurse says for 6-9 months or as prescribed

500

What pt is at highest risk for developing active TB from latent infection?

A patient already immunocompromised

500

If a pt wants to stop their TB treatment drugs because they feel better, what does the nurse say?

Do not, if you have stopped them, start back to prevent relapse

500

Which is the most common HIV-related neurological complication?

Toxoplasmosis

500

After the first injection of an immunotherapy program, the nurse notices a large, red wheal on the client's arm, coughing, and expiratory wheezing. Which intervention should the nurse implement first?

Immediately on noticing the client's sign and symptoms, the nurse would determine that the client is experiencing anaphylaxis to the injection.

500

What nurse action helps prevent drug resistance in TB treatment?

Using combination therapy with multiple TB drugs