NR 224 QUIZ 2 LATEST EXAM COMPLETE 100 QUESTIONS AND CORRECT DETAILED ANSWERS WITH RATIONALES (VERIFIED ANSWERS) |ALREADY GRADED A+||CHAMBERLAINE UNIVERSITY
NR 224 QUIZ 2 LATEST 2023-2024 EXAM COMPLETE
100 QUESTIONS AND CORRECT DETAILED ANSWERS
WITH RATIONALES (VERIFIED ANSWERS)
|ALREADY GRADED A+||CHAMBERLAINE
UNIVERSITY
What are some characteristics of a stage II pressure ulcer? – ANSWER- –
Shallow wound
- open wound
- wound looks red/ pink
- no slough presented
What other aspects may a stage II pressure ulcer look like? – ANSWER- - intact wound
- ruptured serum-filled blister
What does the wound bed look like with a stage II pressure ulcer –
ANSWER- – Resembles a crater
What is a stage III pressure ulcer called? – ANSWER- – Full-thickness
skin loss
What two aspects may be noted as visible in a stage III pressure ulcer? –
ANSWER- – Sloughing - Eschar
What does the wound bed look like in stage III pressure ulcer? –
ANSWER- – deep wound bed
What are some characteristics of a stage III pressure ulcer? – ANSWER- - Exposure of the subcutaneous fat
- slough
- eschar
- tunneling
- undermining
What aspects of the wound bed can be noted with a stage III pressure
ulcer? – ANSWER- – tunneling may be noted with a stage III P.U. - Undermining may be noted w/ a stage III P.U.
What is a stage IV pressure ulcer called? – ANSWER- – full-thickness
and tissue loss
What are some characteristics of a stage IV pressure ulcer? – ANSWER- - exposed tendon or muscle
- exposure of bones
- slough
- eschar
- undermining
- tunneling
What can be noted in stage III and stage IV of pressure ulcers? –
ANSWER- All the below can be noted: - tunneling
- eschar
- undermining
- slough
What are some characteristics of a suspected deep tissue injury? –
ANSWER- – purple or maroon localized area of discoloration - blood-filled blister
What can an area of a suspected deep tissue injury area feel like? –
ANSWER- – painful - mushy
- boggy
- firm
- warmer and/or cooler than adjacent tissue
What is a unstageable pressure ulcer? – ANSWER- – Full-thickness
tissue loss in which the base of the ulcer is covered by eschar or other
characterizations