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Nurse caring for an eight year old with Gastroenteritis she is to add Kcl to the IV. Which of the following signs would be critical for the nurse to assess prior to adding kcl. A. Independant Bowel movements B. A Baseline Ekg C.Ability to void D. Active Bowel sounds.
I have moved the thread from Nursing Issues to here as not a lot of pediatric nurses have responded on the thread yet and I thought it would be valuable if we had more input from that specialty
Last edited by gwenith : Oct 22, 2003 at 10:39 PM.
Wise RN, I am going to guess that the reason for a low k+ would be diarrhea therefore the bowel sounds and movement are not an issue. I would hope she would check the K+ lab level and obtain a baseline EKG if the K+ is low and warrants one. I don't see where voiding would affect the K+level or be required. Is this a test question or an actual clinical question?
B. would be best for the obvious reasons of contactility and cardiac issues.
a: they are already having independent bowel movements (whatever that means)
c: Ability to void is important in the face of renal disease. I would suspect with gastro the pt. is dehydrated a bit and so it's not an issue of the kids ability to pee rather the fluid balance
d: has nothing to do with KCL in the IV.
IMO The BEST answers which of course are not listed is:
make sure the IV is patent,
make sure they are hypokalemic
check their magnesium and renal function labs too
assure the dose is appropriate for age/size of patient
I wouldn't go with ability to void as my first guess. My thinking is a sound nurse will notice if he in fact is not voiding and scan him and cath him if needed. As well a child with gastro without question should automatically be on I/O so this would have been assessed. He might not be able to void as he might be quite dry, bladder empty and he would need hydration. Then once hydrated he could pee. Also, if he is dry he may be hypotensive and not truly perfusing the kidneys which would be worrisome. My reasoning.
Ability to void is my guess, because as pedi nurse our policy was never start the KCL until the kid could pee on his own. Even being cathed in ER did not count.
Originally posted by purplemania Ability to void is my guess, because as pedi nurse our policy was never start the KCL until the kid could pee on his own. Even being cathed in ER did not count.
So you rehydrate before tackling the electrolyte imbalance? Why couldn't you do both at the same time?