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EXAM
A nurse is performing a focused assessment on a 4-hour-old neonate. Which vital sign profile
should the nurse recognize as falling within normal, expected physiological parameters for a
resting newborn?
A) Heart rate: $75\text{ beats/min}$; Respiratory rate: $18\text{ breaths/min}$
B) Heart rate: $135\text{ beats/min}$; Respiratory rate: $42\text{ breaths/min}$
C) Heart rate: $195\text{ beats/min}$; Respiratory rate: $75\text{ breaths/min}$
D) Heart rate: $110\text{ beats/min}$; Respiratory rate: $12\text{ breaths/min}$
• Correct Answer: B) Heart rate: $135\text{ beats/min}$; Respiratory rate: $42\text{
breaths/min}$
• Rationale: Normal resting neonatal parameters include a heart rate of 120–160
beats/min (which can drop to 80–100 during deep sleep or rise up to 180 during crying)
and a respiratory rate of 30–60 breaths/min. Profiles A, C, and D reflect severe
bradycardia/bradypnea or tachycardia/tachypnea, which require immediate medical
intervention.
A newborn infant suddenly begins to gag and cough up excessive oral secretions immediately
following birth. Which action should the nurse take first?
A) Administer explicit chest compressions at a $3:1$ ratio.
B) Feed the infant a small bolus of $5\%$ dextrose or sterile water.
,C) Suction the mouth first with a bulb syringe, and then suction the nose.
D) Apply a continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) mask over the nose and mouth.
• Correct Answer: C) Suction the mouth first with a bulb syringe, and then suction the
nose.
• Rationale: When a neonate gags or has excessive secretions, the priority is clearing the
airway. The nurse must aspirate the mouth first, then the nose. Suctioning the mouth
first prevents the infant from inhaling or aspirating oral secretions into the lungs when
they gasp or breathe through their nose during nasal suctioning.
A nurse is evaluating an infant who is experiencing mild hypothermia with an axillary
temperature of $96.8^\circ\text{F } (36.0^\circ\text{C})$. The nurse notes the infant's
respiratory rate is $68\text{ breaths/min}$. Which intervention is appropriate?
A) Place the infant under a radiant warmer or skin-to-skin with the mother, but withhold oral
feedings.
B) Administer an immediate cold-water tub bath to stimulate brown adipose tissue metabolism.
C) Wrap the infant in a single thin blanket and offer $4\text{ oz}$ of formula immediately.
D) Immediately execute a high-risk gastric lavage using ice-water solutions.
• Correct Answer: A) Place the infant under a radiant warmer or skin-to-skin with the
mother, but withhold oral feedings.
• Rationale: A newborn with a temperature below $97^\circ\text{F } (36.1^\circ\text{C})$
is cold and needs active rewarming via a radiant heater or skin-to-skin contact with the
mother. However, you must never feed an infant whose respiratory rate is over 60
breaths/min due to the high risk of aspiration. Feedings must be held until the
respiratory status stabilizes.
Module 2: Complex Medical-Surgical & Orthopedic Nursing
A client is admitted to the orthopedic unit following a traumatic femoral fracture. The client is
placed in 90/90 skeletal traction to maintain bone alignment. During a safety check, which
observation requires immediate corrective action by the nurse?
A) The traction weights are hanging completely free from the floor.
B) The client's affected foot is resting firmly against the footboard of the bed.
,C) The client's pin sites are clean, dry, and free of purulent drainage.
D) The traction ropes are sitting securely inside the tracks of the pulleys.
• Correct Answer: B) The client's affected foot is resting firmly against the footboard of
the bed.
• Rationale: In 90/90 traction (and all other forms of hanging skeletal traction), the
client's body acts as the countertraction. If the client's foot touches the foot of the bed,
the traction tension is lost, interrupting bone alignment. The nurse must reposition the
client up in bed to maintain the therapeutic pull of the weights.
A nurse is caring for a client with a multi-chamber chest drainage unit (CDU) following a
thoracotomy. During an hourly assessment, the nurse notes that the gentle "tidaling" (fluid
rising and falling with respirations) in the water seal chamber has completely stopped. What
does this indicate?
A) The client has developed a severe, uncontrolled air leak in the pleural space.
B) The lung has likely fully re-inflated, or there is an obstruction/kink in the tubing.
C) The suction source has lost its required 20 cc sterile water fill level.
D) The chest tube has accidentally migrated into the client's duodenal tract.
• Correct Answer: B) The lung has likely fully re-inflated, or there is an obstruction/kink in
the tubing.
• Rationale: Tidaling represents changes in pleural pressure during respiration. It stops
completely when the lung has fully re-inflated and expanded against the chest wall.
However, if tidaling stops before the lung is expected to be re-inflated, the nurse must
immediately check the tubes for an obstruction, clot, or kink.
Module 3: Advanced Neurological Assessment & Localization
A client who sustained a severe traumatic brain injury is admitted to the neuro-intensive care
unit. Upon painful stimulation, the client exhibits rigid extension of the arms, pronation of the
wrists, and extension of the lower extremities. How should the nurse document this finding,
and what does it indicate?
A) Decorticate flexing; indicates a functional lesion limited to the cervical spinal tract.
B) Decerebrate extension; indicates a serious problem within the midbrain or pons.
, C) Positive Babinski sign; indicates normal cortical adaptation.
D) Chvostek's sign; indicates an urgent need for an immediate statin adjustment.
• Correct Answer: B) Decerebrate extension; indicates a serious problem within the
midbrain or pons.
• Rationale: Decerebrate posturing (extensor posturing) is characterized by rigid
extension of the arms and legs, pronation of the wrists, and plantar flexion. It indicates
severe dysfunction or compression within the midbrain or pons and carries a worse
prognosis than decorticate posturing (where the arms are flexed inward like a "C",
indicating problems with the cervical spinal tract or internal capsule).
A client who underwent a subtotal parathyroidectomy 36 hours ago reports a noticeable
onset of numbness, tingling, and "pins-and-needles" sensations around their mouth,
fingertips, and toes. Which emergency medication should the nurse anticipate administering?
A) Intravenous Calcium Gluconate
B) Oral Pantoprazole
C) Subcutaneous Desmopressin (DDAVP)
D) Intramuscular Magnesium Sulfate
• Correct Answer: A) Intravenous Calcium Gluconate
• Rationale: Removal or injury to the parathyroid glands during surgery can cause an
acute drop in parathyroid hormone, resulting in severe hypocalcemia. Numbness and
tingling around the mouth and extremities (paresthesias) are classic early signs of
neuromuscular irritability. Left untreated, this can progress to tetany, seizures, or
laryngospasm. The definitive treatment is replacing calcium using IV Calcium Gluconate.
Module 4: High-Alert Pharmacology & Toxicology
A nurse is preparing discharge education for a client who is newly prescribed a statin
medication to treat hypercholesterolemia. Which critical instructions must the nurse build
into the safety plan?
A) Mix the medication daily with fresh grapefruit juice to accelerate drug breakdown.
B) The medication can be safely continued if the client develops acute liver disease or high AST
levels.