TEST BANK 200 QUESTIONS AND CORRECT DETAILED
ANSWERS WITH RATIONALES |ALREADY
❖ GRADED A+(100% VERIFIED ANSWERS) GUARANTEED
PASS
❖ What Should The Pmhnp Consider When Prescribing Chemical
Restraints?
❖ -Allergy Status
❖ -Prior Med Hx For Adverse Drug Reactions R/T The Meds Ordered In
The Chemical Restraint
❖ -State Regulations Regarding Chemical Restrains Must Be Reviewed
❖ Are The Pmhnp And Other Staff Liable If The Client Has An Allergic
Reaction Or Adverse Side Effects To The Drugs Used For Chemical
Restraint?
❖ No.
❖ The Client Has Been Court-Ordered To Take The Prescribed
Medications And The Standing Order For Chemical Restraints Is
Approved. The Pmhnp And Other Staff Are Not Liable If The Patient
Has An Allergic Reaction Or Adverse Side Effects.
❖ How Does Reviewing The Genetic Makeup Of A Client Help Guide
The Pmhnp In Selecting Medication For Clients?
❖ -Genetic Testing Can Assist By Providing More Information On How
Clients May Respond To Certain Psychotropic Medications
❖ -Provides Information On How A Client May Break Down And
Metabolize Medications Based On The Cytochrome P450 System.
❖ Tanrıkulu And Erbaş (2020) Investigated Identical Twins To
Determine The Presence Of An Inherited Link For Schizophrenia
And Why One Twin May Develop Schizophrenia When The Other
Does Not. When Two People Have 100% Identical Dna, Why Don't
Both Persons Develop The Exact Illnesses? Studies Of Identical
, Danish Twins Found That If One Twin Had Schizophrenia, The
Other Twin Had A 50% Lifetime Risk Of Developing Schizophrenia
(Lemvigh Et Al., 2020). Why Is There Only Half The Risk?
❖ Both Environmental And Psychosocial Stressors Can Impact Mental
Health. Although Twins May Have Identical Genes, Their Gene
Expression May Be Different.
❖1
,❖ There May Be An Environmental Exposure That Turned A Gene "On"
That Should Have Been "Off" For One Twin To Develop
Schizophrenia And Not The Other.
❖ Central Sulcus
❖ Separates The Frontal Lobe From The Parietal Lobe
❖ Frontal Lobe
❖ Associated With Movement, Intelligence, Abstract Thinking
❖ Broca's Area Speech Production Temporal Lobe
❖ Involves Object Identification And Auditory Signals
❖ Cerebellum Coordination Wernicke's Area Speech Comprehension
Occipital Lobe
❖ Primary Visual Area
❖ Parietal Lobe
❖ Keeps Us Alert To What Is Going On Around Us
❖ Sensory Cortex
❖ Pain, Heat, And Other Sensations
❖ Motor Cortex Movement Hippocampus
❖ Involved In Both Memory And Anxiety
❖ Nucleus Accumbens
❖ Involved In The Reward Process
❖ Thalamus
❖2
, ❖ Involved In Sensory Organ And Motor Command Processing
❖ Striatum
❖ Involved In Complex Motor Actions, Also Links Cognition To Motor
Actions
❖ Limbic System
❖ Includes Circuits That Are Associated With Pleasure And Reward
❖ Basal Ganglia
❖ Group Of Structures Involved In Voluntary Motor Movements
❖ Amygdala
❖ Involved In Emotional Regulation And Perception Of Odors
❖ Corpus Callosum
❖ Controls The Communication Between The Two Brain Hemispheres
❖ White Matter
❖ Contains Nerve Fibers That Connect Neurons From Different
Regions Into Functional Circuits
❖ Grey Matter
❖ Contains Nerve Cells And Dendrites
❖ Brain Tissue
❖ Made Up Of Grey Matter And White Matter
❖ Dorsal Striatum
❖ Involved In Complex Motor Actions And Linkage Of Cognition To
Motor Actions
❖ -Main Input Area For Basal Ganglia
❖ *Activated When Anticipating Or Engaging In Pleasure
❖ The Field Of Epigenetics Is Rapidly Growing And Can Help Explain
How Gene Expression Is:
❖ Influenced By Environmental Factors And How Epigenetics