ATI LPN
Brunner & Suddarth's Textbook of Medical-Surgical Nursing 14e (Hinkle 2017)
Chapter 62 : Managements of Patients with Burn Injury Questions
Question 1 of 5
A home care nurse is performing a visit to a patients home to perform wound care following the patients hospital treatment for severe burns. While interacting with the patient, the nurse should assess for evidence of what complication?
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Post-traumatic stress disorder is a common complication in burn survivors, with a high prevalence due to the traumatic nature of the injury. Psychosis, delirium, and dementia are not typical.
Question 2 of 5
A nurse who provides care on a burn unit is preparing to apply a patients ordered topical antibiotic ointment. What action should the nurse perform when administering this medication?
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: A 1/16-inch layer of topical antibiotic ointment, applied with clean gloves after removing old ointment, ensures effective coverage. Old ointment is removed, tongue depressors are not standard, and irrigation follows application.
Question 3 of 5
A patient is brought to the emergency department from the site of a chemical fire, where he suffered a burn that involves the epidermis, dermis, and the muscle and bone of the right arm. On inspection, the skin appears charred. Based on these assessment findings, what is the depth of the burn on the patients arm?
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: A full-thickness burn extends through the epidermis, dermis, and into underlying tissues like muscle or bone, appearing charred and painless due to nerve destruction. Superficial partial-thickness affects the epidermis, deep partial-thickness involves the deeper dermis, and full partial-thickness is not a recognized term.
Question 4 of 5
The current phase of a patients treatment for a burn injury prioritizes wound care, nutritional support, and prevention of complications such as infection. Based on these care priorities, the patient is in what phase of burn care?
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The acute phase, starting 48-72 hours post-burn, focuses on wound care, infection prevention, and nutritional support. The emergent phase prioritizes fluid resuscitation and airway management, immediate resuscitative is not a distinct phase, and rehabilitation focuses on scar prevention and psychosocial support.
Question 5 of 5
A patient in the emergent/resuscitative phase of a burn injury has had blood work and arterial blood gases drawn. Upon analysis of the patients laboratory studies, the nurse will expect the results to indicate what?
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: In the emergent phase, cell damage releases potassium (hyperkalemia), sodium is lost to edema (hyponatremia), hemoconcentration increases hematocrit, and tissue hypoxia causes metabolic acidosis. Other combinations do not align with burn pathophysiology.