[Ex4] - C15 - AP Flashcards
15-1. A patient asks the nurse where nociceptors can be found. How should the nurse respond? One
location in which nociceptors can be found is the:
a. skin.
b. spinal cord.
c. efferent pathways.
d. hypothalamus.
ANS: A
Nociceptors are pain receptors and can be found in the skin. Nociceptors are not located in the
spinal cord. Nociceptors are not located in efferent, but afferent, pathways. Nociceptors are
not located in the hypothalamus but can be found in the meninges.
15-2. A nurse is discussing an individual’s conditioned or learned approach or avoidance behavior
in response to pain. Which system is the nurse describing?
a. Sensory-discriminative system
b. Affective-motivational system
c. Sensory-motivational system
d. Cognitive-evaluative system
ANS: B
The affective-motivational system determines an individual’s conditioned avoidance
behaviors and emotional responses to pain. The sensory-discriminative system is mediated by
the somatosensory cortex and is responsible for identifying the presence, character, location,
and intensity of pain. The sensory-motivational system is not a system in the response to pain.
The cognitive-evaluative system overlies the individual’s learned behavior concerning the
experience of pain and can modulate perception of pain.
15-3. A patient scrapes both knees while playing soccer and reports sharp and well-localized pain.
Which of the following should the nurse document to most accurately characterize the pain?
a. Chronic pain
b. Referred pain
c. Somatic pain
d. Visceral pain
ANS: C
Somatic pain is superficial, arising from the skin. It is typically well localized and described
as sharp, dull, aching, or throbbing. Chronic pain has been defined as lasting for more than
3–6 months. Referred pain is felt in an area removed or distant from its point of origin; the
area of referred pain is supplied by the same spinal segment as the actual site of pain. Visceral
pain is pain in internal organs and lining of body cavities and tends to be poorly localized,
with an aching, gnawing, throbbing, or intermittent cramping quality.
15-4. A nurse should document on the chart that chronic pain is occurring when the patient reports
the pain has lasted longer than:
a. 1 month.
b. 3–6 months.
c. 1 year.
d. 2–3 years.
ANS: B
Chronic or persistent pain has been defined as lasting for more than 3–6 months.
15-5. Several years after an amputation, the patient continues to sporadically feel pain in the absent
hand. What type of pain should the nurse document in the chart?
a. Neuropathic pain
b. Visceral pain
c. Phantom limb pain
d. Chronic pain
ANS: C
The qualities we normally feel from the body, including pain, also can be felt in the absence
of inputs from the body, such as is noted with phantom limb pain. Neuropathic pain is
initiated or caused by a primary lesion or dysfunction in the nervous system. Visceral pain
refers to pain in internal organs and the lining of body cavities. Chronic pain lasts more than
3–6 months and is not associated with loss of a limb.
15-6. When planning care for a child in pain, which principle should the nurse remember? The pain
threshold in children is _____ that of adults.
a. higher than
b. more variable
c. the same as
d. not related to
ANS: B
The pain threshold in children is lower than or the same as that of adults.
15-7. When the nurse is taking a patient’s temperature, which principle should the nurse remember?
Regulation of body temperature primarily occurs in the:
a. cerebrum.
b. brainstem.
c. hypothalamus.
d. pituitary gland.
ANS: C
Temperature regulation (thermoregulation) is mediated primarily by the hypothalamus, not the
cerebrum, the brainstem, or the pituitary gland.
15-8. When the nurse is discussing the patient’s cyclical temperature fluctuation occurring on a
daily basis, what term should the nurse use?
a. Thermogenesis cycle
b. Thermoconductive phases
c. Adaptive pattern
d. Circadian rhythm
ANS: D
Temperature fluctuation is related to circadian rhythm, not the thermogenesis cycle,
thermoconductive phases, or adaptive patterns.
15-9. A nurse wants to teach about one of the primary organs responsible for heat production.
Which organ should the nurse include?
a. Pancreas
b. Liver
c. Adrenal medulla
d. Heart
ANS: C
Thyroxine acts on the adrenal medulla, causing the release of epinephrine into the
bloodstream. Epinephrine causes vasoconstriction that increases metabolic rates, thus
increasing heat production. Heat production does not involve the pancreas, the liver, or the
heart.
15-10. Heat loss from the body via convection occurs by:
a. evaporation of electromagnetic waves.
b. transfer of heat through currents of liquids or gas.
c. dilation of blood vessels bringing blood to skin surfaces.
d. direct heat loss from molecule-to-molecule transfer.
ANS: B
Convection occurs by transfer of heat through currents of gases or liquids, exchanging warmer
air at the body’s surface with cooler air in surrounding spaces. Convection does not involve
electromagnetic waves, bringing blood to skin surfaces, or molecule-to-molecule transfer.
15-11. For evaporation to function effectively as a means of dissipating excess body heat, which one
of the following conditions must be present?
a. Moisture
b. Fever
c. Pyrogens
d. Trauma
ANS: A
Moisture must be present because heat is lost through evaporation from the surface of skin
and lining of mucous membranes, a major source of heat reduction connected with increased
sweating in warmer surroundings. Fever is not required for evaporation to occur, but moisture
is. Pyrogens are heat producers and do not assist with evaporation, but moisture is required.
Trauma is not a portion of the evaporative process of heat loss.
15-12. A patient received a prescription for a weight loss pill. One effect of the pills is to increase the
release of epinephrine. Which of the following would be expected to also occur?
a. Decreased vascular tone
b. Increased skeletal muscle tone
c. Increased heat production
d. Decreased basal metabolic rate
ANS: C
Epinephrine causes vasoconstriction, stimulates glycolysis, and increases metabolic rate, thus
increasing secondary heat production. Epinephrine does not lead to decreased vascular tone or
increased skeletal muscle tone but does increase metabolic rate.
15-13. When a patient has a fever, which of the following thermoregulatory mechanisms is
activated?
a. The body’s thermostat is adjusted to a lower temperature.
b. Temperature is raised above the set point.
c. Bacteria directly stimulate peripheral thermogenesis.
d. The body’s thermostat is reset to a higher level.
ANS: D
Fever (febrile response) is a temporary “resetting of the hypothalamic thermostat” to a higher
level in response to endogenous or exogenous pyrogens. Fever is the result of the body’s
attempt to raise temperature, not adjust it to a lower level. When fever occurs, the temperature
is raised, but the rise is due to a reset of the thermostat. Bacteria do not stimulate peripheral
thermogenesis, but their endotoxins do.
15-14. Exogenous pyrogens are:
a. interleukins.
b. endotoxins.
c. prostaglandins.
d. corticotropin-releasing factors.
ANS: B
Exogenous pyrogens are endotoxins produced by pathogens. They are not interleukins,
prostaglandins, or corticotropin-releasing factors.
15-15. Hikers are attempting to cross the Arizona desert with a small supply of water. The
temperatures cause them to sweat profusely and become dehydrated. The hikers are
experiencing:
a. heat cramping.
b. heat exhaustion.
c. heat stroke.
d. malignant hyperthermia.
ANS: B
Heat exhaustion results from prolonged high core or environmental temperatures, which cause
profound vasodilation and profuse sweating, leading to dehydration, decreased plasma
volumes, hypotension, decreased cardiac output, and tachycardia. Symptoms include
weakness, dizziness, confusion, nausea, and fainting. Heat cramping is severe, spasmodic
cramps in the abdomen and extremities that follow prolonged sweating and associated sodium
loss. Heat cramping usually occurs in those not accustomed to heat or those performing
strenuous work in very warm climates. Heat stroke is a potentially lethal result of an
overstressed thermoregulatory center. With very high core temperatures (>40° C; 104° F), the
regulatory center ceases to function, and the body’s heat loss mechanisms fail. Malignant
hyperthermia is a potentially lethal complication of a rare inherited muscle disorder that may
be triggered by inhaled anesthetics and depolarizing muscle relaxants.