Pain management med surge Test bank questions with verified
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detailed answers
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1.
The nurse who is a member of the palliative care team is assessing a patient. The patient
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indicates that he has been saving his PRN analgesics until the pain is intense because his
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pain control has been inadequate. What teaching should the nurse do with this patient?
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A)
Medication should be taken when pain levels are low so the pain is easier to reduce.
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B)
Pain medication can be increased when the pain becomes intense.
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C)
It is difficult to control chronic pain, so this is an inevitable part of the disease process.
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D)
The patient will likely benefit more from distraction than pharmacologic interventions. -
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✔✔Ans: A ||
Feedback:
Better pain control can be achieved with a preventive approach, reducing the amount of
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time patients are in pain. Low levels of pain are easier to reduce or control than intense
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levels of pain. Pain medication is used to prevent pain so pain medication is not increased
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when pain becomes intense. Chronic pain is treatable. Giving the patient alternative
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methods to control pain is good, but it will not work if the patient is in so much pain that he
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cannot institute reliable alternative methods.
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Two patients on your unit have recently returned to the postsurgical unit after knee
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arthroplasty. One patient is reporting pain of 8 to 9 on a 0-to-10 pain scale, whereas the
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other patient is reporting a pain level of 3 to 4 on the same pain scale. What is the nurse's
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most plausible rationale for understanding the patients' different perceptions of pain?
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A)
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Endorphin levels may vary between patients, affecting the perception of pain.
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B)
One of the patients is exaggerating his or her sense of pain.
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C)
The patients are likely experiencing a variance in vasoconstriction.
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D)
One of the patients may be experiencing opioid tolerance. - ✔✔Ans: A
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Feedback:
Different people feel different degrees of pain from similar stimuli. Opioid tolerance is
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associated with chronic pain treatment and would not likely apply to these patients. The
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nurse should not assume the patient is exaggerating the pain because the patient is the best
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authority of his or her existence of pain, and definitions for pain state that pain is whatever
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the person says it is, existing whenever the experiencing person says it does.
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You are frequently assessing an 84-year-old woman's pain after she suffered a humeral
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fracture in a fall. When applying the nursing process in pain management for a patient of
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this age, what principle should you best apply?
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A)
Monitor for signs of drug toxicity due to a decrease in metabolism.
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B)
Monitor for an increase in absorption of the drug due to age-related changes.
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C)
Monitor for a paradoxical increase in pain with opioid administration.
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D)
Administer analgesics every 4 to 6 hours as ordered to control pain. - ✔✔Ans: A
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Feedback:
Older people may respond differently to pain than younger people. Because elderly people
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have a slower metabolism and a greater ratio of body fat to muscle mass compared with
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, 2
younger people, small doses of analgesic agents may be sufficient to relieve pain, and these
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doses may be effective longer. This fact also corresponds to an increased risk of adverse
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effects. Paradoxical effects are not a common phenomenon. Frequency of administration
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will vary widely according to numerous variables.
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The nurse is assessing a patient's pain while the patient awaits a cholecystectomy. The
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patient is tearful, hesitant to move, and grimacing. When asked, the patient rates his pain as
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a 2 at this time using a 0-to-10 pain scale. How should the nurse best respond to this
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assessment finding? ||
A)
Remind the patient that he is indeed experiencing pain.|| || || || || || || ||
B)
Reinforce teaching about the pain scale number system. || || || || || || ||
C)
Reassess the patient's pain in 30 minutes. || || || || || ||
D)
Administer an analgesic and then reassess. - ✔✔Ans: B || || || || || || || ||
Feedback:
The patient is physically exhibiting signs and symptoms of pain. Further teaching may need
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to be done so the patient can correctly rate the pain. The nurse may also verify that the
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same scale is being used by the patient and caregiver to promote continuity. Although all
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answers are correct, the most accurate conclusion would be to reinforce teaching about the
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pain scale. ||
You are creating a nursing care plan for a patient with a primary diagnosis of cellulitis and a
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secondary diagnosis of chronic pain. What common trait of patients who live with chronic
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pain should inform your care planning?
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A)
They are typically more comfortable with underlying pain than patients without chronic
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pain.