Nursing NR 602 Final Exam Study Guide | Complete 2025–2026 gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt
gt Advanced Practice Nursing Review with Verified Questions, Correct gt gt gt gt gt gt gt
Answers, and Detailed Rationales – Comprehensive Guide for NR
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602 Final Preparation gt gt gt
1
NR 602 Final Exam Study Guide
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Week 5 gt
Pediatrics
• Unit II - Child Development gt gt gt gt
o Chapter 34 - Dermatologic Disorders gt gt gt gt
o Chapter 35 - Eye and Vision Disorders gt gt gt gt gt gt
o Chapter 36 - Ear and Hearing Disorders gt gt gt gt gt gt
o Chapter 37 - Respiratory Disorders gt gt gt gt
Lieberthal, A. S., Carroll, A. E., Chonmaitree, T., Ganiats, T. G., Hoberman, A., Jackson, M. A., ... & Schwartz, R. H. (2013). The diagnosis
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and management of acute otitis media. Pediatrics, 131(3), e964-e999. https://chamberlain-on-worldcat-
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org.chamberlainuniversity.idm.oclc.org/oclc/8588117369
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Week 6 gt
Pediatrics
Unit IV - Common Childhood Conditions and Disorders
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• Chapter 38 - Cardiovascular Disorders gt gt gt gt
• Chapter 39 - Hematologic Disorders gt gt gt gt
• Chapter 46 - Neurologic Disorders gt gt gt gt
• Chapter 43 - Musculoskeletal Disorders gt gt gt gt
, G. C., Tulloh, L. E., & Tulloh, R. R. (2016). Kawasaki disease incidence in children and adolescents: an observational study in
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primary care. The British Journal of General Practice: The Journal of The Royal College of General Practitioners,
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66(645), e271-e276.
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tin-Hermoso, M. R., Berger, S., Bhatt, A. B., Richerson, J. E., Morrow, R., Freed, M. D., & Beekman, R. H. (2017). The care of
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children with congenital heart disease in their primary medical home. Pediatrics, 140(5), e20172607.
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Week 7 gt
Pediatrics
Unit IV - Common Childhood Conditions and Disorders
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• Chapter 18 - Elimination gt gt gt
• Chapter 40 - Gastrointestinal Disorders gt gt gt gt
• Chapter 41 - Genitourinary Disorders gt gt gt gt
• Chapter 45 - Endocrine and Metabolic Disorders
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• Chapter 33 - Atopic, Rheumatic, and Immunodeficiency Disorders
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,https://www.stuvia.com/user/Prose1
Week 8 gt
Pediatrics
Unit IV - Common Childhood Conditions and Disorders
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,https://www.stuvia.com/user/Prose1
• Chapter 15 - Behavioral and Mental Health Promotion
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• Chapter 24 - Injury Prevention and Child Maltreatment
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• Chapter 30 - Neurodevelopmental, Behavioral, and Mental Health Disorders
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Eye disorders
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,https://www.stuvia.com/user/Prose1
2
• USPSTF recommendations for vision screening for children 6 months to 5 years of age note
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that screening tests have reasonable accuracy in identifying strabismus, amblyopia, and
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refractive errors in children 3 to 5 years of age.
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• Refractive errors are the most common visual disorders seen in children
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o Myopia, or nearsightedness, exists when the axial length of the eye is increased in
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relation to the eye’s optical power. As a result, light from a distant object is focused in
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front of the retina rather than directly on it. A myopic child sees close objects clearly but
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distant objects are blurry.
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▪ Myopia may be present at birth however more likely to develop between 6 and 9 gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt
years of age, with increased prevalence after the adolescent growth spurt. Mild
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hyperopia is normal in a young child and should decrease rapidly between 7 and
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14 years of age. gt gt gt gt
o Hyperopia, or farsightedness, exists when the visual image is focused behind the gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt
retina. As a result, distant objects are seen clearly but close objects are blurry.
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o Astigmatism exists when the curvature of the cornea or the lens is uneven; thus the gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt
retina cannot appropriately focus light from an object regardless of the distance,
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which makes vision blurry close up and far away. Rarely, astigmatism can be caused
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by an alteration in the corneal sphere caused by a soft tissue mass on the inner aspect
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of the eyelid, such as a chalazion or hemangioma.
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o Anisometropia is a different refractive error in each eye. It may consist of any gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt
combination of refractive errors discussed earlier, or it may occur with aphakia.
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• Amblyopia usually a unilateral deficit in which there is defective development of the visual
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pathways needed to attain central vision
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o Clear focused images fail to reach the brain, resulting in reduced or permanent loss of
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vision.gt
o The condition is labeled (or typed) according to the structural or refractive problem that
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is causing the poor visual image to reach the brain: deprivational, or obstruction of
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vision (e.g., caused by ptosis, cataract, nystagmus), strabismic (caused by strabismus
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or lazy eye), or refractive (myopia, hyperopia, astigmatism, anisometropia). Diagnosis of
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amblyopia prevents permanent loss of vision in the affected eye.
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o clinical findings: gt
▪ Squinting, tendency to cover or close one eye when concentrating gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt
▪ Abnormal vision, cover/uncover, and/or fundoscopic exam gt gt gt gt gt
▪ Pain in or around eyes and/or headaches (rare) gt gt gt gt gt gt gt
▪ Fatigue, dizziness gt
▪ Developmental delay gt
▪ Family history of refractive errors, strabismus, or amblyopia gt gt gt gt gt gt gt
o Management:
▪ Refer to an ophthalmologist or optometrist for prescription corrective lenses. gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt
School-age children and teenagers should participate in the selection of frames;
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contact lenses may be considered. gt gt gt gt gt
▪ Once a refractive error has been determined or if a child is wearing glasses, gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt
annual evaluations are recommended. gt gt gt gt
▪ Moderate amblyopia usually responds to 2 hours of daily patching or weekend gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt
atropine (produces cycloplegia of nonamblyopic eye).
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▪ Untreated or inadequately treated amblyopia in young childhood results in gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt
irreversible and lifelong visual lossgt gt gt gt gt
• Strabismus defect in ocular alignment, or the position of the eyes in relation to each other; it
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is commonly called lazy eye.
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o strabismus may be hereditary or the result of various eye diseases (e.g., gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt gt
neuroblastoma), trauma, systemic or neurologic dysfunction that paralyzes the
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