ATI LPN
Timby's Introductory Medical-Surgical Nursing Thirteenth, North American Edition
Chapter 56 : Caring for Clients With Sexually Transmitted Infections Questions
Question 1 of 5
A client requesting a chlamydia test asks why it is necessary to receive a test for gonorrhea and syphilis at the same time. Which response from the nurse is the correct explanation?
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: It is common practice to test clients for chlamydia, gonorrhea, syphilis, and HIV because it is not unusual for clients to have concurrent infections with more than one STI. For chlamydia, the causative microorganism is a bacterium named Chlamydia trachomatis. For gonorrhea, the infection is caused by a bacterium named Neisseria gonorrhoeae. The spirochete Treponema pallidum is the causative microorganism of syphilis. The symptoms of these conditions are not identical. The causative microorganisms do not spread through the same medium.
Question 2 of 5
A female client with an anal gonorrhea infection experiences painful bowel elimination and a purulent rectal discharge. The nurse would predict which symptom as most likely to develop as the microorganism disseminates throughout the body?
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: The client with an anal gonorrhea infection experiences symptoms of gonorrhea where the microorganism has invaded the rectum. After the microorganism disseminates throughout the body, the client may manifest a skin rash, fever, and painful joints. Other symptoms such as infections of the urinary tract or vagina, sore throat, intermenstrual bleeding due to cervicitis, and painful urination are associated with the organism's invasion of those structures, depending on the nature of the sexual contact.
Question 3 of 5
A client with syphilis did not receive treatment and has now progressed into the tertiary stage of the disorder. Which symptoms would the nurse expect the client to exhibit?
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: The client with late or tertiary syphilis is noninfectious because the microorganism has invaded the central nervous system (CNS) as well as other organs of the body. Symptoms of tertiary syphilis include tabes dorsalis (a degenerative condition of the CNS that results in loss of peripheral reflexes and of vibratory and position senses), ataxia, and neuropathic joint disease, also called Charcot's joints. Symptoms of secondary syphilis include fever, malaise, rash, headache, sore throat, and lymph node enlargement. Ulcerated chancre occurs in the primary stage.
Question 4 of 5
A client with a history of HSV-2 infection asks the nurse about future sexual activity. Which response would be appropriate?
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The nurse should advise the client to inform all potential sexual partners of the HSV infection even if it is in an inactive state. The nurse should also advise the client to use a condom during sexual activity even if the disease is dormant and to avoid sexual contact if the infection is active. Condoms do not protect skin and mucous membranes left exposed.
Question 5 of 5
The nurse is assessing an older adult client with a sexually transmitted infection (STI). Which of the following should inform the nurse's assessment?
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Nurses should abandon biases that older adults are sexually inactive.
Therefore, when taking a health history, nurses should include questions about sexuality and behaviors that put them at risk for STIs. Older clients who are sexually active have the same risks of acquiring an STI as other age groups. Older adults who are not in monogamous relationships may not understand ways that are appropriate for preventing STIs. Some older adults with an STI are embarrassed and may not seek medical attention. Careful assessment is necessary to help the older adult receive medical treatment as quickly as possible.