NCLEX-RN: Musculoskeletal Practice Questions
ScienceMedicineNursing nicole-ashley9 Save Musculoskeletal NCLEX Questions 35 terms marissaxxcarol Preview Neurological NCLEX Questions 55 terms marissaxxcarol Preview Med Surg Gastrointestinal NCLEX Q...86 terms Jasmine_Lawson4 Preview Predict 176 term n0v A nurse is working with a community group promoting healthy aging. What recommendation is best to help prevent osteoarthritis (OA)?
- Avoid contact sports.
- Get plenty of calcium.
- Lose weight if needed.
- Engage in weight-bearing exercise.
- Lose weight if needed.
- Acetaminophen (Tylenol)
- Cyclobenzaprine hydrochloride (Flexeril)
- Hyaluronate (Hyalgan)
- Ibuprofen (Motrin)
- Acetaminophen (Tylenol)
Obesity can lead to OA, and if the client is overweight, losing weight can help prevent OA or reduce symptoms once it occurs. Arthritis can be caused by contact sports, but this is less common than obesity. Calcium and weight-bearing exercise are both important for osteoporosis.A nurse in the family clinic is teaching a client newly diagnosed with osteoarthritis (OA) about drugs used to treat the disease. For which medication does the nurse plan primary teaching?
All of the drugs are appropriate to treat OA. However, the first-line drug is acetaminophen. Cyclobenzaprine is a muscle relaxant given to treat muscle spasms. Hyaluronate is a synthetic joint fluid implant. Ibuprofen is a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug.
The clinic nurse assesses a client with diabetes during a checkup. The client also has osteoarthritis (OA). The nurse notes the clients blood glucose readings have been elevated. What question by the nurse is most appropriate?
- Are you compliant with following the diabetic diet?
- Have you been taking glucosamine supplements?
- How much exercise do you really get each week?
- You're still taking your diabetic medication, right?
- Have you been taking glucosamine supplements?
- Needs multiple dental fillings
- Over age 85
- Severe osteoporosis
- Urinary tract infection
- Severe osteoporosis
- Administer mild sedation.
- Keep all four side rails up.
- Restrain the clients hands.
- Use an abduction pillow.
- Use an abduction pillow.
All of the topics are appropriate for a client whose blood glucose readings have been higher than usual. However, since this client also has OA, and glucosamine can increase blood glucose levels, the nurse should ask about its use. The other questions all have an element of nontherapeutic communication in them. Compliant is a word associated with negative images, and the client may deny being noncompliant.Asking how much exercise the client really gets is accusatory. Asking if the client takes his or her medications right? is patronizing.The nurse working in the orthopedic clinic knows that a client with which factor has an absolute contraindication for having a total joint replacement?
Osteoporosis is a contraindication to joint replacement because the bones have a high risk of shattering as the new prosthesis is implanted. The client who needs fillings should have them done prior to the surgery. Age greater than 85 is not an absolute contraindication. A urinary tract infection can be treated prior to surgery.An older client has returned to the surgical unit after a total hip replacement. The client is confused and restless. What intervention by the nurse is most important to prevent injury?
Older clients often have trouble metabolizing anesthetics and pain medication, leading to confusion or restlessness postoperatively. To prevent the hip from dislocating, the nurse should use an abduction pillow since the client cannot follow directions at this time. Sedation may worsen the clients mental status and should be avoided. Using all four siderails may be considered a restraint. Hand restraints are not necessary in this situation.
What action by the perioperative nursing staff is most important to prevent surgical wound infection in a client having a total joint replacement?
- Administer preoperative antibiotic as ordered.
- Assess the clients white blood cell count.
- Instruct the client to shower the night before.
- Monitor the clients temperature postoperatively.
- Administer preoperative antibiotic as ordered.
- Assess neurovascular status in both legs.
- Elevate the affected leg and apply ice.
- Prepare to administer pain medication.
- Try to place the affected leg in abduction.
- Assess neurovascular status in both legs.
- Assess the distal circulation in 30 minutes.
- Change the settings based on range of motion.
- Raise the lower siderail on the affected side.
- Remind the client to do quad-setting exercises.
- Raise the lower siderail on the affected side.
To prevent surgical wound infection, antibiotics are given preoperatively within an hour of surgery. Simply taking a shower will not help prevent infection unless the client is told to use special antimicrobial soap. The other options are processes to monitor for infection, not prevent it.The nurse on the postoperative inpatient unit assesses a client after a total hip replacement. The clients surgical leg is visibly shorter than the other one and the client reports extreme pain. While a co-worker calls the surgeon, what action by the nurse is best?
This client has manifestations of hip dislocation, a critical complication of this surgery. Hip dislocation can cause neurovascular compromise. The nurse should assess neurovascular status, comparing both legs. The nurse should not try to move the extremity to elevate or abduct it. Pain medication may be administered if possible, but first the nurse should thoroughly assess the client.A client has a continuous passive motion (CPM) device after a total knee replacement. What action does the nurse delegate to the unlicensed assistive personnel (UAP) after the affected leg is placed in the machine while the client is in bed?
Because the clients leg is strapped into the CPM, if it falls off the bed due to movement, the clients leg (and new joint) can be injured. The nurse should instruct the UAP to raise the siderail to prevent this from occurring. Assessment is a nursing responsibility. Only the surgeon, physical therapist, or specially trained technician adjusts the CPM settings. Quad-setting exercises are not related to the CPM machine.
After a total knee replacement, a client is on the postoperative nursing unit with a continuous femoral nerve blockade. On assessment, the nurse notes the clients pulses are 2+/4+ bilaterally; the skin is pale pink, warm, and dry; and the client is unable to dorsiflex or plantarflex the affected foot. What action does the nurse perform next?
- Document the findings and monitor as prescribed.
- Increase the frequency of monitoring the client.
- Notify the surgeon or anesthesia provider immediately.
- Palpate the clients bladder or perform a bladder scan.
- Notify the surgeon or anesthesia provider immediately.
- Administering pain medication before transport
- Answering any last-minute questions by the client
- Ensuring the family has directions to the facility
- Providing a verbal hand-off report to the facility
- Providing a verbal hand-off report to the facility
- Client who reports jaw pain when eating
- Client with a red, hot, swollen right wrist
- Client who has a puffy-looking area behind the knee
- Client with a worse joint deformity since the last visit
- Client with a red, hot, swollen right wrist
- Assist the client to change positions.
- Document the findings in the clients chart.
- Encourage range of motion of the neck.
- Notify the provider immediately.
- Notify the provider immediately.
With the femoral nerve block, the client should still be able to dorsiflex and plantarflex the affected foot. Since this client has an abnormal finding, the nurse should notify either the surgeon or the anesthesia provider immediately. Documentation is the last priority. Increasing the frequency of assessment may be a good idea, but first the nurse must notify the appropriate person. Palpating the bladder is not related.A nurse is discharging a client to a short-term rehabilitation center after a joint replacement. Which action by the nurse is most important?
As required by The Joint Commission and other accrediting agencies, a hand-off report must be given to the new provider to prevent error. The other options are valid responses but do not take priority.A nurse works in the rheumatology clinic and sees clients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Which client should the nurse see first?
All of the options are possible manifestations of RA. However, the presence of one joint that is much redder, hotter, or more swollen that the other joints may indicate infection. The nurse needs to see this client first.A client with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is on the postoperative nursing unit after having elective surgery. The client reports that one arm feels like pins and needles and that the neck is very painful since returning from surgery. What action by the nurse is best?
Clients with RA can have cervical joint involvement. This can lead to an emergent situation in which the phrenic nerve is compressed, causing respiratory insufficiency. The client can also suffer a permanent spinal cord injury. The nurse needs to notify the provider immediately. Changing positions and doing range of motion may actually worsen the situation. The nurse should document findings after notifying the provider.