1. A nurse is caring for a child who is admitted with suspected acute appendicitis. Which of the following
manifestations should indicate to the nurse that the child's appendix is perforated?
A. Sudden decrease in abdominal pain
B. Absent Rovsing's sign
C. Flaccid abdomen
D. Low-grade fever
2. A nurse is caring for a child who has suspected appendicitis. Which of the following provider prescriptions should
the nurse clarify?
A. Maintain NPO status.
B. Monitor oral temperature every 4 hr.
C. Medicate the client for pain every 4 hr as needed.
D. Administer sodium biphosphate/sodium phosphate. – an enama. Contraindicated due to increase in GI motility
3. A nurse is admitting a client with suspected appendicitis. Identify where the nurse will palpate to assess for pain at
McBurney's point. (Selectable areas, or “Hot Spots,” are outlined in the artwork below. Select only the outlined area
that corresponds to your answer.) RLQ
4. A nurse is caring for a child who has acute appendicitis. Which of the following results should the nurse anticipate
when reviewing this client's laboratory values?
A. WBC 17,000/mm3
B. Neutrophils 3,000/mm3
C. RBC 4.2 million/mm3
D. Lymphocytes 3,000/mm3
5. A nurse is caring for a client who is postoperative following an appendectomy and is prescribed D5 lactated
Ringer's at 150 mL/hr by continuous IV infusion for 12 hr. The drop factor of the manual IV tubing is 20 gtt/mL.
The nurse should set the manual IV infusion to deliver how many gtt/min? (Round the answer to the nearest
whole number. Use a leading zero if it applies. Do not use a trailing zero.) _50_gtt/min
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