ATI LPN
Timby's Introductory Medical-Surgical Nursing Thirteenth, North American Edition
Chapter 69 : Caring for Clients With Mood Disorders Questions
Question 1 of 5
Which type of therapy is facilitated by a bond that develops between the therapist and the client?
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Interpersonal psychotherapy is facilitated by a bond that develops between the therapist and the client. Behavioral therapy endeavors to change unhealthy ways of behaving. Supportive psychotherapy helps clients learn about their disorder and treatment techniques, improve or develop new social skills, and gain encouragement to persevere. Cognitive therapy helps clients replace negative, and often illogical, ways of thinking with more positive outlooks.
Question 2 of 5
The nurse is caring for a client who reports 'not feeling very well.' When asking the client for specific symptoms, the client is vague with details but does state feeling better when the sun is shining. With this information, the nurse would document which disorder as a possibility?
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The nurse would document seasonal affective disorder as a possibility based on the comments of feeling better when there is sunlight. The other options do not relate to sunlight or time of the year.
Question 3 of 5
The nurse has been working with a client who has difficulty controlling mood. The client continues to experience anger outbursts, which makes it difficult to maintain employment. When explaining this dysfunction to the client's family members, which area of the brain does the nurse identify as being the site for mood generation?
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The limbic system is responsible for mood generation, as it regulates emotions and related behaviors. The central nervous system includes the brain and spinal cord but is too broad to specifically address mood. The autonomic nervous system controls involuntary functions like heart rate, not mood. The peripheral nervous system handles sensory and motor functions outside the central nervous system.
Question 4 of 5
The nurse understands that clients who eat which of the following foods experience a food-drug interaction when taking phenelzine?
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: The nurse understands that phenelzine is a monoamine oxidase inhibitor (MAOI). Clients who eat foods containing tyramine experience a food-drug interaction. When a MAOI is combined with foods containing tyramine (alcohol or aged cheese), a hypertensive crisis can occur. Feta cheese is an aged cheese. The other foods do not contain tyramine.
Question 5 of 5
A nurse is caring for a client newly admitted to the emergency department. The nurse obtains the following vital signs: temperature, 101.6?°F; pulse rate, 92 beats/minute; respiratory rate, 28 breaths/minute; and blood pressure, 160/90 mmHg. The client appears disheveled and disoriented. Upon physical assessment, the nurse notes restlessness and muscle spasms with rigidity. Which documented finding in the health history is evaluated as a potential causative factor?
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Serotonin syndrome is a potentially life-threatening condition that results from elevated levels of serotonin in the blood secondary to drug therapy. When reviewing the client's medication history and relating the symptoms assessed, the nurse relates the client's status with changing from one psychotherapeutic to another psychotherapeutic medication as a potential causative factor. There is no correlation from the client symptoms to combining antibiotic therapy with psychotherapeutics, initiating psychotherapeutics, or combining dairy products with psychotherapeutics.