EXAM_SOLUTIONS GUARANTEED SUCCESS 2024/2025 ACADEMIC YEAR
©SOPHIABENNETT 9/3/24 2024/2025
, ©SOPHIABENNETT EXAM SOLUTIONS_2024/2025 Tuesday, September 3, 2024 10:30 AM
Final Pharm NR 508 Exam Study Guide
with Complete Solutions
The primary care NP sees a 12-month-old infant who needs the MMR, Varivax,
influenza, and hepatitis A vaccines. The child's mother tells the NP that she is pregnant.
The NP should: - Answer✔️✔️-administer all of these vaccines today
Although live-virus vaccines should not be administered to mothers during pregnancy,
they may be given to children whose mothers are pregnant.
A patient who has diabetes reports intense discomfort when needing to void. A
urinalysis is normal. To treat this, the primary care NP should consider prescribing: -
Answer✔️✔️-oxybutynin chloride (Ditropan XL).
This patient is describing urge incontinence, or overactive bladder, which occurs when
the detrusor muscle is hyperactive, causing an intense urge to void before the bladder is
full. Urge incontinence is associated with many conditions, including diabetes.
Oxybutynin chloride, which is an anticholinergic, acts to decrease detrusor overactivity
and is indicated for treatment of urge incontinence. Flavoxate is used to treat dysuria
associated with UTI. Bethanechol is indicated for urinary retention. Phenazopyridine is
used to treat dysuria.
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, ©SOPHIABENNETT EXAM SOLUTIONS_2024/2025 Tuesday, September 3, 2024 10:30 AM
A patient reports difficulty returning to sleep after getting up to go to the bathroom every
night. A physical examination and a sleep hygiene history are noncontributory. The
primary care NP should prescribe: - Answer✔️✔️-ZolpiMist
ZolpiMist oral spray is useful for patients who have trouble returning to sleep in the
middle of the night. Zaleplon and ramelteon are used for insomnia caused by difficulty
with sleep onset. Chloral hydrate is not typically used as outpatient therapy.
A 5-year-old child who has no previous history of otitis media is seen in clinic with a
temperature of 100° F. The primary care NP visualizes bilateral erythematous,
nonbulging, intact tympanic membranes. The child is taking fluids well and is playing
with toys in the examination room. The NP should: - Answer✔️✔️-initiate antibiotic
therapy if the child's condition worsens.
Signs and symptoms of otitis media that indicate a need for antibiotic treatment include
otalgia, fever, otorrhea, or a bulging yellow or red tympanic membrane. This child has a
low-grade fever, no history of otitis media, a nonbulging tympanic membrane, and no
otorrhea, so watchful waiting is appropriate. When an antibiotic is started, amoxicillin is
the drug of choice.
An 80-year-old patient with congestive heart failure has a viral upper respiratory
infection. The patient asks the primary care NP about treating the fever, which is 38.5°
C. The NP should: - Answer✔️✔️-recommend acetaminophen.
tell the patient a fever less than 40° C does not need to be treated.
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, ©SOPHIABENNETT EXAM SOLUTIONS_2024/2025 Tuesday, September 3, 2024 10:30 AM
Patients with congestive heart failure may have tachycardia from fever that aggravates
their symptoms, so fever should be treated. High doses should be given with caution in
elderly patients because of possible decreased hepatic function. Antibiotics should not
be given without evidence of bacterial infection.
A patient who takes levodopa and carbidopa for Parkinson's disease reports
experiencing freezing episodes between doses. The primary care NP should consider
using: - Answer✔️✔️-apomorphine.
Apomorphine injection is used for acute treatment of immobility known as "freezing."
A patient is being tapered from long-term therapy with prednisolone and reports weight
loss and fatigue. The primary care NP should counsel this patient to: - Answer✔️✔️-
increase the dose of prednisolone to the most recent amount taken.
Sudden discontinuation or rapid tapering of glucocorticoids in patients who have
developed adrenal suppression can precipitate symptoms of adrenal insufficiency,
including nausea, weakness, depression, anorexia, myalgia, hypotension, and
hypoglycemia. When patients experience these symptoms during a drug taper, the dose
should be increased to the last dose
The primary care nurse practitioner (NP) sees a 50-year-old woman who reports
frequent leakage of urine. The NP learns that this occurs when she laughs or sneezes.
She also reports having an increased urge to void even when her bladder is not full.
She is not taking any medications. The NP should: - Answer✔️✔️-perform a dipstick
urinalysis.
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