NURS 317 Unit 7 Pharm Chapter 3 Flashcards
The nurse at a campus medical clinic is administering a new medication to a 22-year-old female client. The nurse should educate the client about what potential risk of drug therapy?
A) Poisoning
B) Primary effects
C) Secondary effects
D) Teratogenicity
D) Teratogenicity
Rationale:In a woman of childbearing age, it is important for the nurse to consider the teratogenicity of a medication because teratogens can seriously harm or injure the embryo or fetus. Primary actions, secondary actions, and poisoning would be of no greater concern with a woman of childbearing age than with any client.
A client with cancer has been receiving antineoplastics for several weeks. What assessment finding should the nurse interpret as a possible indication of blood dyscrasia?
A) Serum creatinine of 1.2 mg/dL (110 µmol/L)
B) International normalized ratio of 1:1
C) Platelet level of 350,000/ mm3 (350 × 109/L)
D) Hemoglobin of 6.0 g/dL (60.0 g/L)
D) Hemoglobin of 6.0 g/dL (60.0 g/L)
Rationale:Blood dyscrasia is associated with a reduction in some, or all, blood cellular components. This client’s hemoglobin level is significant below reference ranges, while INR, creatinine, and platelets are within norms.
A recent nursing graduate is preparing to enter the workforce. What principle should guide the nurse’s administration of medications?
A) Drugs pose no significant risk of harm if they are used as prescribed.
B) The effects occurring with present-day therapy are much less severe than in previous decades.
C) Several chemical and physiologic processes need to be impacted before a client has an adverse effect.
D) Drugs can cause unexpected reactions even after thorough screening and testing.
D) Drugs can cause unexpected reactions even after thorough screening and testing.
Rationale:Even though drugs are carefully screened and tested in animals before being released to use on humans, drug products often cause unexpected or unacceptable reactions when given. Many effects can be seen when just one chemical factor is changed or altered. All drugs have the potential to cause adverse effects whether they are prescribed or over the counter. Today’s potent and amazing drugs can cause a variety of reactions, many of which are more severe than ever seen before.
The nurse is preparing to administer antineoplastic medication to a client with cancer who has been receiving them for several days. When monitoring for potential adverse effects of this medication, the nurse should perform what assessments? Select all that apply.
A) Check the client’s blood glucose level every 6 hours.
B) Inspect the client’s mucous membranes.
C) Monitor the client’s potassium levels.
D) Monitor the client’s blood cell counts.
E) Monitor the client’s urine output
B) Inspect the client’s mucous membranes.
C) Monitor the client’s potassium levels.
D) Monitor the client’s blood cell counts.
Rationale:Patients receiving antineoplastic medications are at risk for stomatitis, blood dyscrasias, and hyperkalemia. Hyperglycemia and decreased urine output are not normally associated with administration of antineoplastic medications, although specific cancers could cause these or virtually any symptom depending on the organ involved.
The nurse is assessing a number of clients on the acute medicine unit. What client is most likely experiencing an adverse effect from the primary action of the medication?
A) A client taking oral antibiotics who has experienced nausea after each dose
B) A client whose upper gastrointestinal bleed is attributed to nonsteroidal antiinflammatories
C) A client taking antihypertensives who reports dizziness upon standing
D) A client whose antidepressant has caused sexual dysfunction in the past
C) A client taking antihypertensives who reports dizziness upon standing
Rationale:Dizziness is the result of low blood pressure, which is a primary action of an antihypertensive. Nausea, sexual dysfunction, and GI bleeding are secondary actions of the medications in question
What client is experiencing an adverse effect that is a result of primary action?
A) A client who takes an antihistamine and falls asleep
B) A client who develops diarrhea shortly after beginning a course of antibiotics
C) A client taking anticoagulants who develops a gastrointestinal bleed
D) An older adult client who becomes agitated and disoriented after being given a narcotic analgesic
C) A client taking anticoagulants who develops a gastrointestinal bleed
Rationale:Bleeding associated with anticoagulant therapy is an example of a primary action, the extension of the desired effect. A client taking an antihistamine who experiences drowsiness is an example of a secondary action, an effect in addition to the desired effect of drying up secretions. A client taking an antibiotic who experiences diarrhea is an example of a secondary action, an effect in addition to the desired effect of eradicating the infection. An older person taking a narcotic analgesic who experiences hyperactivity is an example of hypersensitivity, an excessive response to either the primary or secondary effects of a drug.
The nurse provides health education for a diverse group of clients. For which client should the nurse emphasize the risk of teratogenic drug effects?
A) A 40-year-old male client who has a history of intravenous drug use and who has endocarditis
B) A 6-year-old girl who has a urinary tract infection and who is accompanied by her parents
C) A 20-year-old female client who has been diagnosed with a chlamydial infection
D) A 60-year-old female client who is tetraplegic and who has developed a sacral pressure ulcer
C) A 20-year-old female client who has been diagnosed with a chlamydial infection
Rationale:The risk of teratogenicity is a priority consideration for female clients of childbearing age, not for males or prepubescent girls.
The nurse cares for a client with a drug allergy. The nurse understands that the allergy is the result of the client developing which response?
A) Antihistamine
B) Secondary effects
C) Antigens
D) Antibodies
D) Antibodies
Rationale:Antibodies are formed by the body to react with antigens in an allergic reaction. The antigen, in this case, is the drug that the body recognizes as a foreign substance to be eliminated. Antihistamines are administered to reduce the histamines secreted as a result of the allergic reaction. An allergic reaction is distinct and different from a secondary effect.
A client presents to the clinic complaining of ringing in the ears and difficulty hearing. What medication in the client’s current regimen should the nurse suspect?
A) Erythromycin
B) Acetaminophen with codeine
C) Hydrochlorothiazide
D) Insulin
A) Erythromycin
Rationale:Macrolide antibiotics such as erythromycin can cause severe auditory nerve damage manifested by ringing in the ears and hearing loss. The other listed medications normally pose no risk to the auditory nerve.
A client is receiving antibiotics for treatment of infection. The nurse should assess for what potential indications of superinfection? Select all that apply.
A) Difficulty swallowing
B) Fever
C) Joint pain
D) Epistaxis (nosebleeds)
E) Glossitis (swollen tongue)
B) Fever
E) Glossitis (swollen tongue)
Rationale:Use of antibiotics can lead to superinfections manifested by fever, diarrhea, black or hairy tongue, inflamed and swollen tongue, mucous membrane lesions, and vaginal discharge with or without itching. Joint pain, dysphagia, and nosebleeds are atypical.
A client is suspected of having a liver injury as a result of drug therapy. What laboratory finding would best support this diagnosis?
A) Elevated serum creatinine level
B) Elevated aspartate aminotransferase (AST) level
C) Sudden drops in hemoglobin, hematocrit, and red cell count
D) Elevated blood urea nitrogen (BUN)
B) Elevated aspartate aminotransferase (AST) level
Rationale:Liver enzymes such as AST and alanine aminotransferase (ALT) would be elevated with liver injury. Elevated BUN and creatinine levels would be seen with renal injury. Sudden drops in hemoglobin, hematocrit, and red cell count are suggestive of bleeding, not liver damage.
Which client is experiencing a secondary action of a medication that he or she has taken?
A) A client who is drowsy after taking antihistamine
B) A client who has developed hives and a rash after taking an antibiotic
C) A client who is lethargic after taking an antianxiety medication
D) A client who is in respiratory distress with elevated blood pressure after taking an antiviral medication
A) A client who is drowsy after taking antihistamine
Rationale:A secondary action is the development of adverse effects in addition to the desired effects. Drowsiness from an antihistamine is an example. A primary action is the development of adverse effects, an extension of the desired effect, from simple overdosage. Excessive relaxation after taking an antianxiety medication is an example. Drug allergies and hypersensitivities are not examples of secondary actions
The nurse is conducting an admission assessment of a new client. When asked about any food or drug allergies, the client states that he or she is allergic to tetracycline. What action should the nurse next perform?
A) Ask the client, “Are you allergic to any other antibiotics, or just tetracycline?”
B) Document an allergy to tetracycline in the client’s health record.
C ) Educate the client about antibiotics that are alternatives to tetracycline.
D) Ask the client, “What happens when you take a dose of tetracycline?”
D) Ask the client, “What happens when you take a dose of tetracycline?”
Rationale:Clients often characterize a wide variety of medication reactions as “allergies.” The nurse should assess further, not because of mistrust for the client but because there is a need for further detail. Documentation of the client’s allergy status should occur at the completion of assessment. Education about alternatives would be premature.
The nurse is assessing a client whose debilitating headache did not respond to the recommended dose of an OTC analgesic. In response, the client took another dose 30 minutes later and then a double dose 1 hour after that. The nurse should assess the client for which possibility?
A) Poisoning
B) Anaphylaxis
C) Allergies
D) Hypersensitivity
A) Poisoning
Rationale:Poisoning occurs when an overdose of a drug damages multiple body systems, leading to the potential for fatal reactions. Hypersensitivity, allergies, and anaphylaxis would not be indicated by an overdosage of the medication
A client is believed to be developing neuroleptic malignant syndrome. What is the nurse’s assessment priority?
A) Deep tendon reflexes
B) Oxygen saturation
C) Cognition
D) Temperature
D) Temperature
Rationale:Neuroleptic malignant syndrome is manifested by hyperthermia, and extrapyramidal symptoms such as slowed reflexes, involuntary movements, and autonomic disturbances. Slowed reflexes would be seen with neuroleptic malignant syndrome, but hyperthermia is a priority assessment. Decreased oxygenation is less common. Cognition is not commonly affected.