Q: Biggest complication of chlamydia in Pelvic inflammatory disorder
women?
Q: Common nosocomial infections? C-diff, UTI, MRSA, CAUTI, bedsores
Q: Complications of chlamydia in men? Epididymitis, prostatitis, sterility, Reiter syndrome
Q: Gonorrhea in men? Dysuria, milky discharge
Dysuria, urinary frequency, abnormal menses, increased vaginal discharge,
Q: Gonorrhea in women? dyspareunia
Q: How can nurses maintain Minimize skin exposure, warm IV fluids, use warm blankets
normothermia?
Q: How do you know if CBI is working? Drainage is light pink or colorless
Q: How is pain assessed? PQRSTU (Provocation, Quality, Radiation, Severity, Timing, Understanding)
Q: How long can a patient have clear 2 hours
liquids before surgery?
Q: How long is a sleep cycle? 90-120 minutes, less NREM and more REM as night progresses
Q: How long is the menstrual cycle? 28 days
6 hours
Q: How long should a patient be NPO
before surgery?
2-10 days
Q: How many days post-exposure for
genital herpes red papules?
Neonate: 16 hrs, Infant: 15 hrs, Toddler: 12-14 hrs, Preschooler: 12 hrs, School
Q: Sleep requirements by age? age: 11-12 hrs, Adolescent: 7.5 hrs, Young adult: 6-8.5 hrs, Older adult: 5-7 hrs
Must use sterile technique when placed/dressing changes to prevent infection
Q: What are central lines?
Q: What are cephalosporins? Antibiotics with cross-allergy to penicillins
Q: What are classifications of surgery by Cosmetic, diagnostic, ablative, reconstructive, palliative,
procurement/transplant
purpose?
Elective, semi-elective, urgent, emergency
Q: What are classifications of surgery by
urgency?
Pneumonia, DVT, PE, atelectasis, hemorrhage, transplant rejection
Q: What are common post-op
(hyperacute minutes-hours, acute days-months, chronic months-years)
complications?
Q: What are condyloma acuminata? Cauliflower-shaped lesions associated with HPV
Q: What are flat warts? Slightly raised lesions, often invisible to naked eye
Treating infections promptly, preventing exposure to pathogens, education and
counseling, use proper PPE, immunizations, proper nutrition, administer abx as
Q: What are interventions for patients ordered, psychosocial support, spiritual care, monitor VS, assess and reassess
with impaired immunity? wound healing
Patient positioning, airway, circulation, breathing, vitals, time out for verification,
Q: What are intra-op considerations? types of nurses: first assist RN, CRNA, circulating RN, scrub nurse
Q: What are keratotic warts? Thick, hard lesions associated with HPV
, Sleep hygiene, increase protein, hand hygiene, massage, monitor vitals
Q: What are non-pharm interventions for
immunity?
Q: What are NREM stages? N1-light, N2-slightly deeper, N3-deep/slow wave
NIPS (neonates), FLACC (2mo-3yr), Wong-Baker Faces (3-8yr), Numerical
Q: What are pain scales? Rating Scale (8yr-adult)
Q: What are papular warts? Smooth lesions on keratinized skin associated with HPV
Q: What are penicillins? End in "-cillin", adverse rx: hypersensitivity and GI upset
Analgesics, antibiotics, NSAIDS (GI upset, bleeding, avoid aspirin)
Q: What are pharm interventions for
immunity?
Swollen lymph nodes, decreased appetite, inflammation, decreased cognition
Q: What are physical signs of impaired
immunity?
NPO 6 hours before surgery, labs within normal limits (PT, PTT, INR), ensure
Q: What are pre-op considerations? understanding of procedure, hold anticoagulants
Spinal anesthetics-lidocaine, benzodiazepines-diazepam, anticholinergics-
glycopyrrolate, NSAIDS-tordol, serotonin receptor antagonists-zofran, short
Q: What are pre-op medications? acting barbiturates-thiopental sodium, general anesthetics, antibiotics-ancef,
antacids-pepcid
Age, cryptorchidism, family history
Q: What are risk factors for testicular
cancer?
Infections transmitted during intimate sexual contact; oral, anal, or vaginal
Q: What are sexually transmitted
infections?
Alopecia, hypersensitivity, hypotension, urticaria, dyspnea, stomatitis, N/V/D,
Q: What are side effects of
anorexia, malaise, bone marrow depression
chemotherapy?
Q: What are signs of testicular cancer? Slight painless enlargement, abdominal ache, heaviness in scrotum
Partners, prevention of pregnancy, protection from STIs, practice, past history
Q: What are the 5 P's for STI
prevention?
Q: What are the classifications of Major or minor
surgery by seriousness?
Follicular: 1-5 days; Ovulation: 6-14 days; Luteal: 14-18 days
Q: What are the phases of the
menstrual cycle?
Q: What does SBAR stand for? Situation, Background, Assessment, Recommendation
Conjunctivitis and pneumonia
Q: What happens to newborn born with
chlamydia?
Conjunctivitis and blindness
Q: What happens to newborn born with
gonorrhea?
Usually painless but abnormal bleeding in amount, duration, and time related to
Q: What is abnormal uterine bleeding
hormone imbalance or pelvic neoplasms
(AUB)?
Q: What is a chronic illness? Illness that develops slowly and lasts an extended period of time
Q: What is acute pain? Protective, temporary, resolves with tissue healing
Q: What is a cyst? Fluid-filled sac
women?
Q: Common nosocomial infections? C-diff, UTI, MRSA, CAUTI, bedsores
Q: Complications of chlamydia in men? Epididymitis, prostatitis, sterility, Reiter syndrome
Q: Gonorrhea in men? Dysuria, milky discharge
Dysuria, urinary frequency, abnormal menses, increased vaginal discharge,
Q: Gonorrhea in women? dyspareunia
Q: How can nurses maintain Minimize skin exposure, warm IV fluids, use warm blankets
normothermia?
Q: How do you know if CBI is working? Drainage is light pink or colorless
Q: How is pain assessed? PQRSTU (Provocation, Quality, Radiation, Severity, Timing, Understanding)
Q: How long can a patient have clear 2 hours
liquids before surgery?
Q: How long is a sleep cycle? 90-120 minutes, less NREM and more REM as night progresses
Q: How long is the menstrual cycle? 28 days
6 hours
Q: How long should a patient be NPO
before surgery?
2-10 days
Q: How many days post-exposure for
genital herpes red papules?
Neonate: 16 hrs, Infant: 15 hrs, Toddler: 12-14 hrs, Preschooler: 12 hrs, School
Q: Sleep requirements by age? age: 11-12 hrs, Adolescent: 7.5 hrs, Young adult: 6-8.5 hrs, Older adult: 5-7 hrs
Must use sterile technique when placed/dressing changes to prevent infection
Q: What are central lines?
Q: What are cephalosporins? Antibiotics with cross-allergy to penicillins
Q: What are classifications of surgery by Cosmetic, diagnostic, ablative, reconstructive, palliative,
procurement/transplant
purpose?
Elective, semi-elective, urgent, emergency
Q: What are classifications of surgery by
urgency?
Pneumonia, DVT, PE, atelectasis, hemorrhage, transplant rejection
Q: What are common post-op
(hyperacute minutes-hours, acute days-months, chronic months-years)
complications?
Q: What are condyloma acuminata? Cauliflower-shaped lesions associated with HPV
Q: What are flat warts? Slightly raised lesions, often invisible to naked eye
Treating infections promptly, preventing exposure to pathogens, education and
counseling, use proper PPE, immunizations, proper nutrition, administer abx as
Q: What are interventions for patients ordered, psychosocial support, spiritual care, monitor VS, assess and reassess
with impaired immunity? wound healing
Patient positioning, airway, circulation, breathing, vitals, time out for verification,
Q: What are intra-op considerations? types of nurses: first assist RN, CRNA, circulating RN, scrub nurse
Q: What are keratotic warts? Thick, hard lesions associated with HPV
, Sleep hygiene, increase protein, hand hygiene, massage, monitor vitals
Q: What are non-pharm interventions for
immunity?
Q: What are NREM stages? N1-light, N2-slightly deeper, N3-deep/slow wave
NIPS (neonates), FLACC (2mo-3yr), Wong-Baker Faces (3-8yr), Numerical
Q: What are pain scales? Rating Scale (8yr-adult)
Q: What are papular warts? Smooth lesions on keratinized skin associated with HPV
Q: What are penicillins? End in "-cillin", adverse rx: hypersensitivity and GI upset
Analgesics, antibiotics, NSAIDS (GI upset, bleeding, avoid aspirin)
Q: What are pharm interventions for
immunity?
Swollen lymph nodes, decreased appetite, inflammation, decreased cognition
Q: What are physical signs of impaired
immunity?
NPO 6 hours before surgery, labs within normal limits (PT, PTT, INR), ensure
Q: What are pre-op considerations? understanding of procedure, hold anticoagulants
Spinal anesthetics-lidocaine, benzodiazepines-diazepam, anticholinergics-
glycopyrrolate, NSAIDS-tordol, serotonin receptor antagonists-zofran, short
Q: What are pre-op medications? acting barbiturates-thiopental sodium, general anesthetics, antibiotics-ancef,
antacids-pepcid
Age, cryptorchidism, family history
Q: What are risk factors for testicular
cancer?
Infections transmitted during intimate sexual contact; oral, anal, or vaginal
Q: What are sexually transmitted
infections?
Alopecia, hypersensitivity, hypotension, urticaria, dyspnea, stomatitis, N/V/D,
Q: What are side effects of
anorexia, malaise, bone marrow depression
chemotherapy?
Q: What are signs of testicular cancer? Slight painless enlargement, abdominal ache, heaviness in scrotum
Partners, prevention of pregnancy, protection from STIs, practice, past history
Q: What are the 5 P's for STI
prevention?
Q: What are the classifications of Major or minor
surgery by seriousness?
Follicular: 1-5 days; Ovulation: 6-14 days; Luteal: 14-18 days
Q: What are the phases of the
menstrual cycle?
Q: What does SBAR stand for? Situation, Background, Assessment, Recommendation
Conjunctivitis and pneumonia
Q: What happens to newborn born with
chlamydia?
Conjunctivitis and blindness
Q: What happens to newborn born with
gonorrhea?
Usually painless but abnormal bleeding in amount, duration, and time related to
Q: What is abnormal uterine bleeding
hormone imbalance or pelvic neoplasms
(AUB)?
Q: What is a chronic illness? Illness that develops slowly and lasts an extended period of time
Q: What is acute pain? Protective, temporary, resolves with tissue healing
Q: What is a cyst? Fluid-filled sac