ATI LPN
PN Adult Medical Surgical 2023 Questions
Extract:
Question 1 of 5
A nurse is collecting data from a client who is perimenopausal. Which of the following findings is the priority for the nurse to report to the provider?
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Perimenopause brings hormonal shifts, but urinary frequency stands out it may signal a UTI, bladder issue, or pelvic pathology, requiring urgent evaluation over typical symptoms. Difficulty sleeping and hot flashes stem from estrogen fluctuations, common and manageable with lifestyle changes. Vaginal dryness, also hormonal, responds to lubricants or estrogen therapy, not immediate concern. Frequency, however, risks infection or renal complications older women often present atypically (e.g., confusion), per geriatric guidelines. Using ABCs, elimination issues outrank comfort, driving prompt reporting for diagnostics (e.g., urinalysis), preventing progression, making it the priority finding.
Question 2 of 5
A nurse is reinforcing teaching with a client who has a new ileostomy. Which of the following statements by the client indicates an understanding of the teaching?
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Using a skin sealant protects the peristomal skin, showing understanding of ileostomy care. Moisturizers can interfere, the wafer should be 1/8 inch larger, and emptying frequency varies but isn't the best indicator here.
Question 3 of 5
A nurse in a long-term care facility is assisting with the plan of care for a client who has late-stage Alzheimer's disease. Which of the following actions should the nurse include in the plan of care?
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Late-stage Alzheimer's reduces mobility, heightening pressure ulcer risk. Turning every 2 hours redistributes weight, preserving skin integrity, a preventive standard (e.g., NPUAP guidelines). Mirrors confuse patients unable to recognize themselves, increasing agitation. Written instructions are futile severe cognitive loss prevents comprehension; physical cues work better. Open-ended questions overwhelm, as verbal ability is minimal; simple prompts suit better. Repositioning addresses a physical priority, reduces complications like infection, and upholds care quality, making it the essential action.
Question 4 of 5
A nurse is collecting data from an older adult client. Which of the following findings should indicate to the nurse that the client has a bladder infection?
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Older adults with bladder infections (UTIs) often lack classic symptoms, presenting with altered mental status confusion or lethargy from systemic inflammation or bacteremia, per geriatric care standards. Normal WBC (9,000/mm³) doesn't rule out UTI; leukocytosis isn't always present early. A slight fever (37.3°
C) supports infection but isn't definitive alone. Diminished reflexes tie to aging or neurology, not UTI. Mental status change is a red flag prompting urinalysis and antibiotics preventing sepsis, making it the strongest indicator in this population.
Question 5 of 5
A nurse is reviewing vital signs obtained by an assistive personnel on a group of clients. Which of the following changes should the nurse identify as the priority finding?
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Blood pressure dropping to 86/50 mm Hg from 118/78 signals hypotension, risking organ perfusion a circulation priority per ABCs. Heart rate falling to 68 from 110 may normalize post-tachycardia, less urgent without distress. Respiratory rate rising to 20 from 12 suggests compensation, but hypotension trumps breathing acuity. Fever at 38.8°C indicates infection, but hemodynamic instability is more immediate shock or bleeding needs rapid action. This finding drives urgent assessment (e.g., fluids, vasopressors), aligning with triage protocols, making it the nurse's top concern.