The nurse assesses a patient's surgical wound on the first postoperative day and notes redness and warmth around the incision. Which action by the nurse
... [Show More] is appropriate?
a. Obtain wound cultures.
b. Document the assessment.
c. Notify the health care provider.
d. Assess the wound every 2 hours.
ANS: B
The incisional redness and warmth are indicators of the normal initial (inflammatory) stage of wound healing by primary intention. The nurse should document the wound appearance and continue to monitor the wound.
A patient with an open leg lesion has a white blood cell (WBC) count of 13,500/μL and a band count of 11%. What prescribed action should the nurse take first?
a. Obtain cultures of the wound.
b. Begin antibiotic administration.
c. Continue to monitor the wound for drainage.
d. Redress the wound with wet-to-dry dressings.
ANS: A
The increase in WBC count with the increased bands (shift to the left) indicates that the patient probably has a bacterial infection, and the nurse should obtain wound cultures.
A patient with a systemic bacterial infection feels cold and has a shaking chill. Which assessment finding will the nurse expect next?
a. Skin flushing
b. Muscle cramps
c. Rising body temperature
d. Decreasing blood pressure
ANS: C
The patient's complaints of feeling cold and shivering indicate that the hypothalamic set point for temperature has been increased and the temperature is increasing.
A young adult patient who is receiving antibiotics for an infected leg wound has a temperature of 101.8° F (38.7° C) The patient reports having no discomfort. Which action by the nurse is appropriate?
a. Apply a cooling blanket.
b. Notify the health care provider.
c. Check the patient's temperature again in 4 hours.
d. Give acetaminophen (Tylenol) prescribed PRN for pain.
ANS: C
Mild to moderate temperature elevations (<103° F) do not harm young adult patients and may benefit host defense mechanisms. The nurse should continue to monitor the temperature.
A patient's 4 3-cm leg wound has a 0.4-cm black area in the center of the wound surrounded by yellow-green semiliquid material. Which dressing should the nurse apply to the wound?
a. Dry gauze dressing
b. Nonadherent dressing
c. Hydrocolloid dressing
d. Transparent film dressing
ANS: C
The wound requires debridement of the necrotic areas and absorption of the yellow-green slough. A hydrocolloid dressing such as DuoDerm would accomplish these goals
The nurse notes that a patient's open abdominal wound widens as it extends deeper into the abdomen. How would the nurse document this characteristic?
a. Eschar
b. Slough
c. Maceration
d. Undermining
ANS: D
Undermining is evident when a cotton-tipped applicator is placed in the wound and there is a narrower "lip" around the wound, which widens as the wound deepens. Eschar is a crusted cover over a wound. Slough and maceration refer to loosening friable tissue.
A patient with rheumatoid arthritis has been taking oral corticosteroids for 2 years. Which nursing action is most likely to detect early signs of infection in this patient?
a. Monitor white blood cell counts.
b. Check the skin for areas of redness.
c. Measure the temperature every 2 hours.
d. Ask about feelings of fatigue or malaise.
ANS: D
The earliest manifestation of an infection may be "just not feeling well." Common clinical manifestations of inflammation and infection are frequently not present when patients receive immunosuppressive medications. [Show Less]