ATI Leadership Management Proctored Exam (Latest
Completed Version) (Questions and Answers)
A nurse answers a call light and finds a client anxious,
... [Show More] short of breath, reporting chest pain, and having a blood pressure of 88/52
mm Hg on the cardiac monitor. What action by the nurse takes priority?
a. Assess the client's lung sounds.
b. Notify the Rapid Response Team.
c. Provide reassurance to the client.
d. Take a full set of vital signs.
b
This client has manifestations of a pulmonary embolism, and the most critical action is to notify the Rapid Response Team for
speedy diagnosis and treatment. The other actions are appropriate also but are not the priority.
A client is admitted with a pulmonary embolism (PE). The client is young, healthy, and active and has no known risk factors for PE.
What action by the nurse is most appropriate?
a. Encourage the client to walk 5 minutes each hour.
b. Refer the client to smoking cessation classes.
c. Teach the client about factor V Leiden testing.
d. Tell the client that sometimes no cause for disease is found.
c
Factor V Leiden is an inherited thrombophilia that can lead to abnormal clotting events, including PE. A client with no known risk
factors for this disorder should be referred for testing. Encouraging the client to walk is healthy, but is not related to the development
of a PE in this case, nor is smoking. Although there are cases of disease where no cause is ever found, this assumption is
premature.
A client has a pulmonary embolism and is started on oxygen. The student nurse asks why the client's oxygen saturation has not
significantly improved. What response by the nurse is best?
a. "Breathing so rapidly interferes with oxygenation."
b. "Maybe the client has respiratory distress syndrome."
c. "The blood clot interferes with perfusion in the lungs."
d. "The client needs immediate intubation and mechanical ventilation."
c
A large blood clot in the lungs will significantly impair gas exchange and oxygenation. Unless the clot is dissolved, this process will
continue unabated. Hyperventilation can interfere with oxygenation by shallow breathing, but there is no evidence that the client is
hyperventilating, and this is also not the most precise physiologic answer. Respiratory distress syndrome can occur, but this is not
as likely. The client may need to be mechanically ventilated, but without concrete data on FiO2 and SaO2, the nurse cannot make
that judgment.
A client is on intravenous heparin to treat a pulmonary embolism. The client's most recent partial thromboplastin time (PTT) was 25
seconds. What order should the nurse anticipate?
a. Decrease the heparin rate.
b. Increase the heparin rate.
c. No change to the heparin rate.
d. Stop heparin; start warfarin (Coumadin). [Show Less]