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Plese be careful here with posting quesitons taken directly from the study guides that are out there.
Now, to the matter at hand. Remember, you are the nurse directly taking care fo the patient all day. Caring for the patient is a collaborative effort with the different people caring for the patient. We each need to watch out for the patient, think of yourself as the traffic cop or the security guard for this paitent, you want what is safest for them.
Lungs are completely clear, and patient is not having any respiratory issues. Sometimes things will turn around very quickly for these patients, they do not need IV aminophyllin any longer than necessary. What are the side effects of the drug. It works as a diuretic, it was actually used in the olden days for that prupose, before the days of lasix, etc., it can cause an elevated heart rate in some patients.
See what I mean? So many ways of looking at the questions. I appreciate Suzanne's reminder of the collaborative effort. The way D is written, there is no mention of stopping the infiltration. We were taught to never assume anything and that the answers had everything you needed in them.
Two days and counting. Heavy sigh.....
See what I mean? So many ways of looking at the questions. I appreciate Suzanne's reminder of the collaborative effort. The way D is written, there is no mention of stopping the infiltration. We were taught to never assume anything and that the answers had everything you needed in them.Two days and counting. Heavy sigh.....
Well, there really isn't any mention of stopping the IV in any of them.
NCINDASUN
61 Posts
I'm still plugging away at practicing questions. Some of them drive me crazy! For example:
A client who has clear lung sounds and unlabored breathing is receiving aminophylline IV. Which of the following would be the MOST appropriate nursing action if the client's IV infiltrates?
A) Apply warm soaks to the infiltration site, start an new IV, and continue IV medications. Didn't seem like a good plan
B) Wait two hours, reassess the client, and restart the IV if the client has wheezing or labored breathing. That's a no. Can't just stop and not tell Dr.
C) Restart the IV and contine the previous medication schedule. Sounded good to me as long as you use a different site
D) Call the physician and recommend that the IV medication be changed to PO. My first thought: If the Dr. wanted IV, why would I challenge that?
Turns out D is the answer, BUT: Davis says IV aminophylline should be avoided but if extravasation occurs, give local injection of 1% procaine and application of heat may relieve pain and promote vasodilation. So by this intervention A is also true.
How the heck am I supposed to work through a question like this? I can't win!