NURSING 2349 Final Exam Study Guide 2023/2024
NURSING 2349 Final Exam Study Guide 2023/2024. How does age and gender affect responses to pain? Children learn indirectly from their parents and caregivers how to respond to pain, as far as the level of pain that justifies a complaint, how to express pain, when to stop complaining about the pain and who to approach for help when experiencing pain. *Socialization of children will influence the way they respond to pain as adults About 80% of the elderly experience chronic, moderate to severe pain. National Institutes of Health stated that women believe emotions of fear and anxiety effect their perception of pain adversely, whereas men focus more on the physical aspects. Women are known to have a lower pain threshold and tolerance, and seek medical attention more frequently than men. *Heart attacks are the number one threat to women – since they do not experience typical symptoms and type of pain, they are not hospitalized and treated as aggressively as men. Women also experience more microvascular changes such as narrowing of the small coronary vessels. Most prevalent painful disorders seen in both genders, but mainly women include fibromyalgia, Raynaud’s disease, rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, headaches, facial pain, and TMJ. Most prevalent painful disorders seen in both genders, but mainly men include pancreatitis, duodenal ulcer, and ankylosing spondylitis. Men have a higher chance of injury related to sports and motor vehicle accidents. 2. What is intractable pain? Examples? Pain that is refractory or resistant to some or all forms of treatment. o Pain due to a known cause - such as malignancy, nerve compression or entrapment, phantom limb pain, spinal cord damage, and myofascial syndromes - and is resistant to therapy is referred to as chronic intractable pain. o Incurable pain – goal is to reduce discomfort 3. What is Neuropathic pain? Example? Pain that results from injury to a nerve, malfunction of neural transmission process, or impaired regulation. o Frequently described as paroxysmal (sudden spasm-like pain) o Examples: pain associated with trigeminal neuralgia, postherpetic neuralgia, and diabetic peripheral neuropathy 4. What is nociceptive pain? Examples? Pain in response to potentially damaging stimuli o Occurs when the pain impulse is processed normally over intact nerves o Two types of nociceptive pain: somatic and visceral 5. What somatic pain? Examples? Pain that originates from the bones, joints, muscles, skin, and connective tissue o In the skin and superficial structures - sharp, pulsatile, and well-localized o In the deep structures – dull, aching, pulsatile, not well localized o Examples: burns, lacerations, fractures, infections, inflammatory conditions, 6. What is visceral pain? Example? Pain arising from the body organs or gastrointestinal tract o Intermittent, achy, crampy pain – poorly localized o Examples: Menstrual cramps, GI pain, appendicitis, gall stones, angina, bowel distention, pancreatitis 7. Describe referred pain? Example? Transfer of visceral pain sensations and deep somatic pain through the autonomic nervous system to a part of the body distant from the actual origin of the pain o Pain felt in area other than where stimulus occurs o Example: myocardial infarction felt in the jaw or down the left arm 8. What is breakthrough pain? Examples? A transitory increase in pain that occurs in addition to persistent pain o Commonly seen in advanced stages of cancer and late-stage diseases such as AIDS. o Acute "flare up" of pain in a patient who is on regular doses of pain medication for persistent pain. o Treated by "rescue" pain meds. These are quick acting meds that don't stay in the body long...e.g. quick release morphine. o *Think cancer pain 9. Know differences between acute and chronic pain, S/S, examples of each and treatment options of each. Acute pain: usually short term and quick onset. Responds well to treatment. Can be a new flare up during chronic pain. o S/S: Increases systolic BP, increased HR and force of contraction, increased respirations, dilated blood vessels to brain, increased alertness, dilated pupils, rapid speech o Example: burn, muscle injury, fractured bone, surgical wound o Treatment: Acetaminophen, NSAIDs, Opioids, Adjuvants o *goal is to find and remove underlying cause Chronic pain: Sudden or slow onset of mild to severe pain that is usually long term – typically slow onset. Poorly localized, hard to treat. Pain that lasts more than 6 months. o S/S: mild to severe pain that does not go away as expected after illness or injury, described as shooting, burning, aching, or electrical pain, discomfort, soreness, tightness, or stiffness. o Example: migraine headaches, sickle cell crisis, osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, cancer pain, fibromyalgia o Treatment: Physical therapy, occupational therapy, NSAIDs, nerve blocks, opioids, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs 10. Describe prolonged stress response and the cascade of harmful effects to the body system-wide. Chronic stress that disrupts nearly every system in the body: o Suppress immune system o Upset digestive and reproductive systems o Increase risk of heart attack and stroke o Speeds up the aging process Can cause psychiatric illnesses such as anxiety disorders, clinical depression, and PTSD Prolonged stress can result in crisis and burnout (p. 259) o Crisis: an event that drastically changes the person’s routine that is perceived as a threat to self. Usual coping mechanisms are ineffective, resulting in anxiety and inability to function adequately. 5 phases of crisis: precrisis, impact, crisis, adaptive, postcrisis
Escuela, estudio y materia
- Institución
- Rasmussen College
- Grado
- NURSING 2349 (NURSING2349)
Información del documento
- Subido en
- 9 de julio de 2023
- Número de páginas
- 28
- Escrito en
- 2022/2023
- Tipo
- Examen
- Contiene
- Preguntas y respuestas
Temas
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nursing 2349
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nursing
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nursing 2349 final exam study guide 20232024
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describe referred pain example
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what is visceral pain example
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what is breakthrough pain examples
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