Chapter 39: Caring for Clients With Head and Spinal Cord Trauma - Nurselytic

Questions 30

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Timby's Introductory Medical-Surgical Nursing Thirteenth, North American Edition

Chapter 39 : Caring for Clients With Head and Spinal Cord Trauma Questions

Question 1 of 5

The nurse is caring for a client who has had intracranial surgery and is being discharged home. What instructions would the nurse give the client besides instructions on the medication?

Correct Answer: D

Rationale: In addition, the nurse must provide the following verbal and written instructions: Watch for signs of intracranial bleeding and infection (expect swelling around the eye and below the incision). Expect sensory changes such as hearing a 'clicking' sound around the bone flap, which will disappear as healing takes place. Understand that headaches also are common, but notify the surgeon if a mild analgesic such as acetaminophen fails to relieve them. Care for the surgical site as directed by the physician. Some recommendations include keeping the incision clean, avoiding scrubbing the incision, securing remaining hair away from the incision, resuming shampooing the hair when the staples or sutures are removed, and wearing a hat when outside to avoid sunburn until hair growth resumes. Maintain safety precautions at home, including ambulating only with assistance and ensuring well-lit and clutter-free rooms. Do not drive until the risk of seizures has been eliminated. Engage in exercises that promote strength and endurance. Use techniques to ensure bowel and bladder elimination. Follow feeding and/or nutritional suggestions. Keep follow-up appointments for measuring anticonvulsant blood levels, electroencephalograms, and continued medical care and evaluation. This information is usually given to the client on a take-home instruction sheet.

Question 2 of 5

The nurse is caring for a client who was discovered unconscious after falling off a ladder. The client is diagnosed with a concussion. All testing is normal, and discharge instructions are compiled. Which instructions have been compiled for the spouse?

Correct Answer: B

Rationale: All of the options are typical for a client being discharged with a concussion. The instruction that is emphasized is to observe for any signs of behavior changes, which may indicate an increase in the client's intracranial pressure. A concussion results in diffuse or microscopic injury to the brain with symptoms that may evolve.

Question 3 of 5

The nurse and physician are viewing a brain scan, which indicates bleeding at the point of impact to the skull and edema on the opposite side. The client is sleeping but can be aroused. The client has no memory of the accident. The nurse provides all details to the next shift and is most accurate to report which type of injury?

Correct Answer: D

Rationale: The nurse most accurately reports a contrecoup injury because the client has this type of dual brain injury. The client has experienced not only a direct strike to the brain but the brain ricochets in the skull to the opposite side causing damage and inflammation at that location as well. The client experienced a head injury, which is a general term. The injury is a contusion because it is more serious than a concussion and leads to structural injury to the brain. It is inaccurate to report a coup injury because this reveals injury to the brain itself from a direct strike to the head.

Question 4 of 5

The nurse is working on the neurologic unit at a local hospital. The nurse has four clients assigned who sustained head injuries as a result of an industrial accident. Which client would the nurse anticipate the physician sending for specialized care?

Correct Answer: C

Rationale: The client who has history of playing many years of a physical sport such as soccer and use the head to redirect the ball may have had years of injury to the brain. When concussions occur repetitively, even though they may have not shown injury at that time, chronic traumatic encephalopathy may result. Chronic traumatic encephalopathy, which can produce neurodegeneration, will need specialized care. The client who has a history of seizures may have no brain injury. The client who was in a previous accident may have had injury, but it is not of a repetitive nature. The client with a father who has Parkinson's disease will have regular follow-up care.

Question 5 of 5

A client has sustained a head injury and is unconscious in the emergency room. A family member of the client arrives and is providing details of the client's medical history. Which information is of most concern to the nurse?

Correct Answer: B

Rationale: The nurse is most concerned that the client is prescribed warfarin (Coumadin) because this is a blood thinner. Due to the action of the medication, the client is at a high risk for intracranial bleeding. The cardiovascular system will be assessed, but that is not the area of greatest concern at this time. The nurse will care for the HIV positive client using standard precautions. A history of concussions may indicate past brain damage, but the potential for active bleeding is the highest concern.

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