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Student Nurse's Notes

Online reference for all student nurses and for those who will take the board exam.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Amoebiasis

This is a protozoal infection of human beings initially involves the colon, but may spread to soft tissues, most commonly to the liver or lungs, by contiguity or hematogenous or lymphatic dissemination.

Etiologic Agent
Entamoeba histolytica
  • prevalent in unsanitary areas
  • common in warm climate
  • acquired by swallowing
  • cyst survives a few days outside of the body
  • cyst passes to the large intestine and hatch into trophozoites. It passes into the mesenteric veins, to the portal vein, to the liver, thereby forming “amoebic liver abscess”.

Pathology

When the cyst is swallowed, it passes through the stomach unharmed and shows no activity while in an acidic environment.
In the alkaline medium of the intestine, metacyst begins to move within the cyst wall.
The quadrinucleate amoeba emerges and divides into amebulas that are swept down into the cecum.
Mature cyst in the large intestines leaves the host in great numbers.
The cyst can remain viable and infective in moist and cool environment for at least 12 days and in water for 30 days.
The cysts are resistant to levels of chlorine normally used for water purification.
They are rapidly killed by putrifaction, desiccation, and temperatures below 5 and above 40 degrees.

Source: human excreta

Incubation Period
3 days – severe infection
Several months – subacute & chronic form
3-4 weeks – average

* The microorganism is communicable for the entire duration of the illness.

Mode of Transmission
Fecal-oral transmission
Direct contact – sexual contact (orogenital, oroanal & proctogenital sexual activity)
Indirect contact – uncooked leafy vegetables or foods contaminated with E. histolytica cysts.

Clinical Manifestations
Acute amoebic dysentery
a. slight attack of diarrhea, altered with periods of constipation
b. diarrhea, watery and foul-smelling stool often containing blood-streaked mucus
c. colic and gaseous distention of the lower abdomen
d. nausea, flatulence, abdominal distention and tenderness in the right iliac region over the colon.

Chronic amoebic dysentery
a. attack of dysentery that lasts for several days, usually followed by constipation.
b. tenesmus accompanied by the desire to defecate
c. anorexia, weight loss, and weakness
d. liver may be enlarged
e. watery stool, bloody and mucoid
f. vague abdominal distress, flatulence, constipation or irregularity of bowel
g. mild toxemia, constant fatigue & lassitude
h. abdomen losses its elasticity when picked-up between fingers
I. On sigmoidoscopy, scattered ulceration with yellowish and erythematous border
j. The gangrenous type (fatal cases) is characterized by the appearance of large sloughs of intestinal tissues in the stool accompanied by hemorrhage.

Extraintestinal forms
Hepatic
a. Pain at the upper right quadrant with tenderness of the liver
b. jaundice
c. intermittent fever
d. loss of weight or anorexia
e. abscess may break through the lungs, patient coughs anchovy-sauce sputum.

Diagnostic Exam
Stool exam (cyst, white and yellow pus with plenty of amoeba)
Blood exam ( leukocytosis)
Proctoscopy/Sigmoidoscopy

Treatment Modalities
Metronidazole (Flagyl)
Tetracycline
Ampicillin, quinolones, sulfadiazine
Streptomycin SO4, Chloramphenicol
Lost fluid and electrolytes should be replaced.

Nursing Management
Observe isolation and enteric precaution.

Provide health education and instruct patient to:
  • boil water for drinking or use purified water
  • avoid washing food from open drum or pail
  • cover leftover food
  • wash hands after defecation or before eating
  • avoid ground vegetables

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Ascariasis

It is an infection caused by a parasitic roundworm, Ascaris lumbricoides.

Mode of Transmission:
Transmitted through contaminated fingers put into the mouth.
Ingestion of contaminated food and drinks.

Diagnostic tests
  • Stool for Ova – demonstration of a fertilized or unfertilized eggs in the stool “Kato Technics”.
  • Abdominal X-ray – densed shadow of adult ascaris which looks like strands of spaghetti, “dot” sign
  • Routine blood counts – significant eosinophelia

Treatment
  • Albendazole or Mebendazole
  • Piperazine Citrate
  • Pyrantel Pamoate
Nursing Interventions
  1. Isolation is not needed.
  2. Preventive measures in each home and in the community should be enforced.
  3. All members of the family must be taught of health matters – must be trained to wash their hands before handling food, must be taught to was thoroughly all fruits and vegetables eaten raw, and must be taught about effective sewage disposal.
  4. Availability of toilet facilities must be ensured.
  5. Importance of personal hygiene should be explained.

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Communication in Nursing

Modes of Communication:
Verbal- spoken or written words
Non Verbal - gesture, facial expressions, posture, gait, physical appearance

Characteristics of a Good Communiaction:
  1. Simplicity
  2. Clarity
  3. Timing and Relevance
  4. Adaptibility
  5. Credibility
Sender(encoder)--Message--Receiver(decoder)
l__Response(feedback)___l

Communication- basic component of human relationship and Nurse-client relationship
Non-verbal-is more accurate
-variety of feelings that can be expressed by a single non- verbal expression
-in assessing non verbal behaviors, cultural influences must be considered.
Reciprocal Interaction -EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION
-this is a two way process
-it is based on trust and aimed at identifying clients needs and developing mutual goalss
Trust- positive nursing patient relationship
Covert- inner feelings, uncomfortable to talk about and maybe revealed through non-verbal modes
Validation- attempt to confirm the observers' perceptions through feedback,interpretation and classification

Therapeutic Communication-fundamental component in all phases of Nursing process
  1. attentive listening
  2. paraphrasing or restating
  3. clarifying
  4. using open ended questions
  5. focusing
  6. being specific
  7. using touch and silence
  8. offering self
  9. clarifying reality,time,sequence
  10. acknowleding
  11. providing general leads
  12. giving informations
  13. summarizing
Block Communication:
  1. unwarranted reassurance
  2. agreeing/disagreeing
  3. giving common advice
  4. stereotyping
  5. being defensive
  6. posing judgement
  7. challenging
  8. probing
  9. testing
  10. rejecting
  11. changing topics/subjects
Effective Nurse Client Relationship
This is a helping relationship which is growth facilitating and provides support and comfort.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Audio: Nclex Hot topics

Medical and Surgical Nursing:

OB Nursing Bullets

v Unlike false labor, true labor produces regular rhythmic contractions, abdominal discomfort, progressive descent of the fetus, bloody show, and progressive effacement and dilation of the cervix.

v To help a mother break the suction of her breast-feeding infant, the nurse should teach her to insert a finger at the corner of the infant’s mouth.

v Administering high levels of oxygen to a premature neonate can cause blindness as a result of retrolental fibroplasia.

v Amniotomy is artificial rupture of the amniotic membranes.

v During pregnancy, weight gain averages 25 to 30 lb (11 to 13.5 kg).

v Rubella has a teratogenic effect on the fetus during the first trimester. It produces abnormalities in up to 40% of cases without interrupting the pregnancy.

v Immunity to rubella can be measured by a hemagglutination inhibition test (rubella titer). This test identifies exposure to rubella infection and determines susceptibility in pregnant women. In a woman, a titer greater than 1:8 indicates immunity.

v When used to describe the degree of fetal descent during labor, floating means the presenting part isn’t engaged in the pelvic inlet, but is freely movable (ballotable) above the pelvic inlet.

v When used to describe the degree of fetal descent, engagement means when the largest diameter of the presenting part has passed through the pelvic inlet.

v Fetal station indicates the location of the presenting part in relation to the ischial spine. It’s described as –1, –2, –3, –4, or –5 to indicate the number of centimeters above the level of the ischial spine; station –5 is at the pelvic inlet.

v Fetal station also is described as +1, +2, +3, +4, or +5 to indicate the number of centimeters it is below the level of the ischial spine; station 0 is at the level of the ischial spine.

v During the first stage of labor, the side-lying position usually provides the greatest degree of comfort, although the patient may assume any comfortable position.

v During delivery, if the umbilical cord can’t be loosened and slipped from around the neonate’s neck, it should be clamped with two clamps and cut between the clamps.

v An Apgar score of 7 to 10 indicates no immediate distress, 4 to 6 indicates moderate distress, and 0 to 3 indicates severe distress.

v To elicit Moro’s reflex, the nurse holds the neonate in both hands and suddenly, but gently, drops the neonate’s head backward. Normally, the neonate abducts and extends all extremities bilaterally and symmetrically, forms a C shape with the thumb and forefinger, and first adducts and then flexes the extremities.

v Pregnancy-induced hypertension (preeclampsia) is an increase in blood pressure of 30/15 mm Hg over baseline or blood pressure of 140/95 mm Hg on two occasions at least 6 hours apart accompanied by edema and albuminuria after 20 weeks’ gestation.

v Positive signs of pregnancy include ultrasound evidence, fetal heart tones, and fetal movement felt by the examiner (not usually present until 4 months’ gestation

v Goodell’s sign is softening of the cervix.

v Quickening, a presumptive sign of pregnancy, occurs between 16 and 19 weeks’ gestation.

v Ovulation ceases during pregnancy.

v Any vaginal bleeding during pregnancy should be considered a complication until proven otherwise.

v To estimate the date of delivery using Nägele’s rule, the nurse counts backward 3 months from the first day of the last menstrual period and then adds 7 days to this date.

v At 12 weeks’ gestation, the fundus should be at the top of the symphysis pubis.

v Cow’s milk shouldn’t be given to infants younger than age 1 because it has a low linoleic acid content and its protein is difficult for infants to digest.

v If jaundice is suspected in a neonate, the nurse should examine the infant under natural window light. If natural light is unavailable, the nurse should examine the infant under a white light.

v The three phases of a uterine contraction are increment, acme, and decrement.

v The intensity of a labor contraction can be assessed by the indentability of the uterine wall at the contraction’s peak. Intensity is graded as mild (uterine muscle is somewhat tense), moderate (uterine muscle is moderately tense), or strong (uterine muscle is boardlike).

v Chloasma, the mask of pregnancy, is pigmentation of a circumscribed area of skin (usually over the bridge of the nose and cheeks) that occurs in some pregnant women.

v The gynecoid pelvis is most ideal for delivery. Other types include platypelloid (flat), anthropoid (apelike), and android (malelike).

v Pregnant women should be advised that there is no safe level of alcohol intake.

v The frequency of uterine contractions, which is measured in minutes, is the time from the beginning of one contraction to the beginning of the next.

v Vitamin K is administered to neonates to prevent hemorrhagic disorders because a neonate’s intestine can’t synthesize vitamin K.

v Before internal fetal monitoring can be performed, a pregnant patient’s cervix must be dilated at least 2 cm, the amniotic membranes must be ruptured, and the fetus’s presenting part (scalp or buttocks) must be at station –1 or lower, so that a small electrode can be attached.

v Fetal alcohol syndrome presents in the first 24 hours after birth and produces lethargy, seizures, poor sucking reflex, abdominal distention, and respiratory difficulty.

v Variability is any change in the fetal heart rate (FHR) from its normal rate of 120 to 160 beats/minute. Acceleration is increased FHR; deceleration is decreased FHR.

v In a neonate, the symptoms of heroin withdrawal may begin several hours to 4 days after birth.

v In a neonate, the symptoms of methadone withdrawal may begin 7 days to several weeks after birth.

v In a neonate, the cardinal signs of narcotic withdrawal include coarse, flapping tremors; sleepiness; restlessness; prolonged, persistent, high-pitched cry; and irritability.

v The nurse should count a neonate’s respirations for 1 full minute.

v Chlorpromazine (Thorazine) is used to treat neonates who are addicted to narcotics.

v The nurse should provide a dark, quiet environment for a neonate who is experiencing narcotic withdrawal.

v In a premature neonate, signs of respiratory distress include nostril flaring, substernal retractions, and inspiratory grunting.

v Respiratory distress syndrome (hyaline membrane disease) develops in premature infants because their pulmonary alveoli lack surfactant.

v Whenever an infant is being put down to sleep, the parent or caregiver should position the infant on the back. (Remember back to sleep.)

v The male sperm contributes an X or a Y chromosome; the female ovum contributes an X chromosome.

v Fertilization produces a total of 46 chromosomes, including an XY combination (male) or an XX combination (female).

v The percentage of water in a neonate’s body is about 78% to 80%.

v To perform nasotracheal suctioning in an infant, the nurse positions the infant with his neck slightly hyperextended in a “sniffing” position, with his chin up and his head tilted back slightly.

v Organogenesis occurs during the first trimester of pregnancy, specifically, days 14 to 56 of gestation.

v After birth, the neonate’s umbilical cord is tied 1" (2.5 cm) from the abdominal wall with a cotton cord, plastic clamp, or rubber band.

v Gravida is the number of pregnancies a woman has had, regardless of outcome.

v Para is the number of pregnancies that reached viability, regardless of whether the fetus was delivered alive or stillborn. A fetus is considered viable at 20 weeks’ gestation.

v An ectopic pregnancy is one that implants abnormally, outside the uterus.

v The first stage of labor begins with the onset of labor and ends with full cervical dilation at 10 cm.

v The second stage of labor begins with full cervical dilation and ends with the neonate’s birth.

v The third stage of labor begins after the neonate’s birth and ends with expulsion of the placenta.

v In a full-term neonate, skin creases appear over two-thirds of the neonate’s feet. Preterm neonates have heel creases that cover less than two-thirds of the feet.

v The fourth stage of labor (postpartum stabilization) lasts up to 4 hours after the placenta is delivered. This time is needed to stabilize the mother’s physical and emotional state after the stress of childbirth.

v At 20 weeks’ gestation, the fundus is at the level of the umbilicus.

v At 36 weeks’ gestation, the fundus is at the lower border of the rib cage.

v A premature neonate is one born before the end of the 37th week of gestation.

v Pregnancy-induced hypertension is a leading cause of maternal death in the United States.

v A habitual aborter is a woman who has had three or more consecutive spontaneous abortions.

v Threatened abortion occurs when bleeding is present without cervical dilation.

v A complete abortion occurs when all products of conception are expelled.

v Hydramnios (polyhydramnios) is excessive amniotic fluid (more than 2,000 ml in the third trimester).

v Stress, dehydration, and fatigue may reduce a breast-feeding mother’s milk supply.

v During the transition phase of the first stage of labor, the cervix is dilated 8 to 10 cm and contractions usually occur 2 to 3 minutes apart and last for 60 seconds.

v A nonstress test is considered nonreactive (positive) if fewer than two fetal heart rate accelerations of at least 15 beats/minute occur in 20 minutes.

v A nonstress test is considered reactive (negative) if two or more fetal heart rate accelerations of 15 beats/minute above baseline occur in 20 minutes.

v A nonstress test is usually performed to assess fetal well-being in a pregnant patient with a prolonged pregnancy (42 weeks or more), diabetes, a history of poor pregnancy outcomes, or pregnancy-induced hypertension.

v A pregnant woman should drink at least eight 8-oz glasses (about 2,000 ml) of water daily.

v When both breasts are used for breast-feeding, the infant usually doesn’t empty the second breast. Therefore, the second breast should be used first at the next feeding.

v A low-birth-weight neonate weighs 2,500 g (5 lb 8 oz) or less at birth.

v A very-low-birth-weight neonate weighs 1,500 g (3 lb 5 oz) or less at birth.

v When teaching parents to provide umbilical cord care, the nurse should teach them to clean the umbilical area with a cotton ball saturated with alcohol after every diaper change to prevent infection and promote drying.

v Teenage mothers are more likely to have low-birth-weight neonates because they seek prenatal care late in pregnancy (as a result of denial) and are more likely than older mothers to have nutritional deficiencies.

v Linea nigra, a dark line that extends from the umbilicus to the mons pubis, commonly appears during pregnancy and disappears after pregnancy.

v Implantation in the uterus occurs 6 to 10 days after ovum fertilization.

v Placenta previa is abnormally low implantation of the placenta so that it encroaches on or covers the cervical os.

v In complete (total) placenta previa, the placenta completely covers the cervical os.

v In partial (incomplete or marginal) placenta previa, the placenta covers only a portion of the cervical os.

v Abruptio placentae is premature separation of a normally implanted placenta. It may be partial or complete, and usually causes abdominal pain, vaginal bleeding, and a boardlike abdomen.

v Cutis marmorata is mottling or purple discoloration of the skin. It’s a transient vasomotor response that occurs primarily in the arms and legs of infants who are exposed to cold.

v The classic triad of symptoms of preeclampsia are hypertension, edema, and proteinuria. Additional symptoms of severe preeclampsia include hyperreflexia, cerebral and vision disturbances, and epigastric pain.

v Ortolani’s sign (an audible click or palpable jerk that occurs with thigh abduction) confirms congenital hip dislocation in a neonate.

v The first immunization for a neonate is the hepatitis B vaccine, which is administered in the nursery shortly after birth.

v If a patient misses a menstrual period while taking an oral contraceptive exactly as prescribed, she should continue taking the contraceptive.

v If a patient misses two consecutive menstrual periods while taking an oral contraceptive, she should discontinue the contraceptive and take a pregnancy test.

v If a patient who is taking an oral contraceptive misses a dose, she should take the pill as soon as she remembers or take two at the next scheduled interval and continue with the normal schedule.

v If a patient who is taking an oral contraceptive misses two consecutive doses, she should double the dose for 2 days and then resume her normal schedule. She also should use an additional birth control method for 1 week.

v Eclampsia is the occurrence of seizures that aren’t caused by a cerebral disorder in a patient who has pregnancy-induced hypertension.

v In placenta previa, bleeding is painless and seldom fatal on the first occasion, but it becomes heavier with each subsequent episode.

v Treatment for abruptio placentae is usually immediate cesarean delivery.

v Drugs used to treat withdrawal symptoms in neonates include phenobarbital (Luminal), camphorated opium tincture (paregoric), and diazepam (Valium).

v Infants with Down syndrome typically have marked hypotonia, floppiness, slanted eyes, excess skin on the back of the neck, flattened bridge of the nose, flat facial features, spadelike hands, short and broad feet, small male genitalia, absence of Moro’s reflex, and a simian crease on the hands.

v The failure rate of a contraceptive is determined by the experience of 100 women for 1 year. It’s expressed as pregnancies per 100 woman-years.

v The narrowest diameter of the pelvic inlet is the anteroposterior (diagonal conjugate).

v The chorion is the outermost extraembryonic membrane that gives rise to the placenta.

v The corpus luteum secretes large quantities of progesterone.

v From the 8th week of gestation through delivery, the developing cells are known as a fetus.

v In an incomplete abortion, the fetus is expelled, but parts of the placenta and membrane remain in the uterus.

v The circumference of a neonate’s head is normally 2 to 3 cm greater than the circumference of the chest.

v After administering magnesium sulfate to a pregnant patient for hypertension or preterm labor, the nurse should monitor the respiratory rate and deep tendon reflexes.

v During the first hour after birth (the period of reactivity), the neonate is alert and awake.

v When a pregnant patient has undiagnosed vaginal bleeding, vaginal examination should be avoided until ultrasonography rules out placenta previa.

v After delivery, the first nursing action is to establish the neonate’s airway.

v Nursing interventions for a patient with placenta previa include positioning the patient on her left side for maximum fetal perfusion, monitoring fetal heart tones, and administering I.V. fluids and oxygen, as ordered.

v The specific gravity of a neonate’s urine is 1.003 to 1.030. A lower specific gravity suggests overhydration; a higher one suggests dehydration.

v The neonatal period extends from birth to day 28. It’s also called the first 4 weeks or first month of life.

v A woman who is breast-feeding should rub a mild emollient cream or a few drops of breast milk (or colostrum) on the nipples after each feeding. She should let the breasts air-dry to prevent them from cracking.

v Breast-feeding mothers should increase their fluid intake to 2½ to 3 qt (2,500 to 3,000 ml) daily.

v After feeding an infant with a cleft lip or palate, the nurse should rinse the infant’s mouth with sterile water.

v The nurse instills erythromycin in a neonate’s eyes primarily to prevent blindness caused by gonorrhea or chlamydia.

v Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) has been cultured in breast milk and can be transmitted by an HIV-positive mother who breast-feeds her infant.

v A fever in the first 24 hours postpartum is most likely caused by dehydration rather than infection.

v Preterm neonates or neonates who can’t maintain a skin temperature of at least 97.6° F (36.4° C) should receive care in an incubator (Isolette) or a radiant warmer. In a radiant warmer, a heat-sensitive probe taped to the neonate’s skin activates the heater unit automatically to maintain the desired temperature.

v During labor, the resting phase between contractions is at least 30 seconds.

v Lochia rubra is the vaginal discharge of almost pure blood that occurs during the first few days after childbirth.

v Lochia serosa is the serous vaginal discharge that occurs 4 to 7 days after childbirth.

v Lochia alba is the vaginal discharge of decreased blood and increased leukocytes that’s the final stage of lochia. It occurs 7 to 10 days after childbirth.

v Colostrum, the precursor of milk, is the first secretion from the breasts after delivery.

v The length of the uterus increases from 2½" (6.3 cm) before pregnancy to 12½" (32 cm) at term.

v To estimate the true conjugate (the smallest inlet measurement of the pelvis), deduct 1.5 cm from the diagonal conjugate (usually 12 cm). A true conjugate of 10.5 cm enables the fetal head (usually 10 cm) to pass.

v The smallest outlet measurement of the pelvis is the intertuberous diameter, which is the transverse diameter between the ischial tuberosities.

v Electronic fetal monitoring is used to assess fetal well-being during labor. If compromised fetal status is suspected, fetal blood pH may be evaluated by obtaining a scalp sample.

v In an emergency delivery, enough pressure should be applied to the emerging fetus’s head to guide the descent and prevent a rapid change in pressure within the molded fetal skull.

v After delivery, a multiparous woman is more susceptible to bleeding than a primiparous woman because her uterine muscles may be overstretched and may not contract efficiently.

v Neonates who are delivered by cesarean birth have a higher incidence of respiratory distress syndrome.

v The nurse should suggest ambulation to a postpartum patient who has gas pain and flatulence.

v Massaging the uterus helps to stimulate contractions after the placenta is delivered.

v When providing phototherapy to a neonate, the nurse should cover the neonate’s eyes and genital area.

v The narcotic antagonist naloxone (Narcan) may be given to a neonate to correct respiratory depression caused by narcotic administration to the mother during labor.

v In a neonate, symptoms of respiratory distress syndrome include expiratory grunting or whining, sandpaper breath sounds, and seesaw retractions.

v Cerebral palsy presents as asymmetrical movement, irritability, and excessive, feeble crying in a long, thin infant.

v The nurse should assess a breech-birth neonate for hydrocephalus, hematomas, fractures, and other anomalies caused by birth trauma.

v When a patient is admitted to the unit in active labor, the nurse’s first action is to listen for fetal heart tones.

v In a neonate, long, brittle fingernails are a sign of postmaturity.

v Desquamation (skin peeling) is common in postmature neonates.

v A mother should allow her infant to breast-feed until the infant is satisfied. The time may vary from 5 to 20 minutes.

v Nitrazine paper is used to test the pH of vaginal discharge to determine the presence of amniotic fluid.

v A pregnant patient normally gains 2 to 5 lb (1 to 2.5 kg) during the first trimester and slightly less than 1 lb (0.5 kg) per week during the last two trimesters.

v Neonatal jaundice in the first 24 hours after birth is known as pathological jaundice and is a sign of erythroblastosis fetalis.

v A classic difference between abruptio placentae and placenta previa is the degree of pain. Abruptio placentae causes pain, whereas placenta previa causes painless bleeding.

v Because a major role of the placenta is to function as a fetal lung, any condition that interrupts normal blood flow to or from the placenta increases fetal partial pressure of arterial carbon dioxide and decreases fetal pH.

v Precipitate labor lasts for approximately 3 hours and ends with delivery of the neonate.

v Methylergonovine (Methergine) is an oxytocic agent used to prevent and treat postpartum hemorrhage caused by uterine atony or subinvolution.

v As emergency treatment for excessive uterine bleeding, 0.2 mg of methylergonovine (Methergine) is injected I.V. over 1 minute while the patient’s blood pressure and uterine contractions are monitored.

v Braxton Hicks contractions are usually felt in the abdomen and don’t cause cervical change. True labor contractions are felt in the front of the abdomen and back and lead to progressive cervical dilation and effacement.

v The average birth weight of neonates born to mothers who smoke is 6 oz (170 g) less than that of neonates born to nonsmoking mothers.

v Culdoscopy is visualization of the pelvic organs through the posterior vaginal fornix.

v The nurse should teach a pregnant vegetarian to obtain protein from alternative sources, such as nuts, soybeans, and legumes.

v The nurse should instruct a pregnant patient to take only prescribed prenatal vitamins because over-the-counter high-potency vitamins may harm the fetus.

v High-sodium foods can cause fluid retention, especially in pregnant patients.

v A pregnant patient can avoid constipation and hemorrhoids by adding fiber to her diet.

v If a fetus has late decelerations (a sign of fetal hypoxia), the nurse should instruct the mother to lie on her left side and then administer 8 to 10 L of oxygen per minute by mask or cannula. The nurse should notify the physician. The side-lying position removes pressure on the inferior vena cava.

v Oxytocin (Pitocin) promotes lactation and uterine contractions.

v Lanugo covers the fetus’s body until about 20 weeks’ gestation. Then it begins to disappear from the face, trunk, arms, and legs, in that order.

v In a neonate, hypoglycemia causes temperature instability, hypotonia, jitteriness, and seizures. Premature, postmature, small-for-gestational-age, and large-for-gestational-age neonates are susceptible to this disorder.

v Neonates typically need to consume 50 to 55 cal per pound of body weight daily.

v Because oxytocin (Pitocin) stimulates powerful uterine contractions during labor, it must be administered under close observation to help prevent maternal and fetal distress.

v During fetal heart rate monitoring, variable decelerations indicate compression or prolapse of the umbilical cord.

v Cytomegalovirus is the leading cause of congenital viral infection.

v Tocolytic therapy is indicated in premature labor, but contraindicated in fetal death, fetal distress, or severe hemorrhage.

v Through ultrasonography, the biophysical profile assesses fetal well-being by measuring fetal breathing movements, gross body movements, fetal tone, reactive fetal heart rate (nonstress test), and qualitative amniotic fluid volume.

v A neonate whose mother has diabetes should be assessed for hyperinsulinism.

v In a patient with preeclampsia, epigastric pain is a late symptom and requires immediate medical intervention.

v After a stillbirth, the mother should be allowed to hold the neonate to help her come to terms with the death.

v Molding is the process by which the fetal head changes shape to facilitate movement through the birth canal.

v If a woman receives a spinal block before delivery, the nurse should monitor the patient’s blood pressure closely.

v If a woman suddenly becomes hypotensive during labor, the nurse should increase the infusion rate of I.V. fluids as prescribed.

v The best technique for assessing jaundice in a neonate is to blanch the tip of the nose or the area just above the umbilicus.

v During fetal heart monitoring, early deceleration is caused by compression of the head during labor.

v After the placenta is delivered, the nurse may add oxytocin (Pitocin) to the patient’s I.V. solution, as prescribed, to promote postpartum involution of the uterus and stimulate lactation.

v Pica is a craving to eat nonfood items, such as dirt, crayons, chalk, glue, starch, or hair. It may occur during pregnancy and can endanger the fetus.

v A pregnant patient should take folic acid because this nutrient is required for rapid cell division.

v A woman who is taking clomiphene (Clomid) to induce ovulation should be informed of the possibility of multiple births with this drug.

v If needed, cervical suturing is usually done between 14 and 18 weeks’ gestation to reinforce an incompetent cervix and maintain pregnancy. The suturing is typically removed by 35 weeks’ gestation.

v During the first trimester, a pregnant woman should avoid all drugs unless doing so would adversely affect her health.

v Most drugs that a breast-feeding mother takes appear in breast milk.

v The Food and Drug Administration has established the following five categories of drugs based on their potential for causing birth defects: A, no evidence of risk; B, no risk found in animals, but no studies have been done in women; C, animal studies have shown an adverse effect, but the drug may be beneficial to women despite the potential risk; D, evidence of risk, but its benefits may outweigh its risks; and X, fetal anomalies noted, and the risks clearly outweigh the potential benefits.

v A patient with a ruptured ectopic pregnancy commonly has sharp pain in the lower abdomen, with spotting and cramping. She may have abdominal rigidity; rapid, shallow respirations; tachycardia; and shock.

v A patient with a ruptured ectopic pregnancy commonly has sharp pain in the lower abdomen, with spotting and cramping. She may have abdominal rigidity; rapid, shallow respirations; tachycardia; and shock.

v The mechanics of delivery are engagement, descent and flexion, internal rotation, extension, external rotation, restitution, and expulsion.

v A probable sign of pregnancy, McDonald’s sign is characterized by an ease in flexing the body of the uterus against the cervix.

v Amenorrhea is a probable sign of pregnancy.

v A pregnant woman’s partner should avoid introducing air into the vagina during oral sex because of the possibility of air embolism.

v The presence of human chorionic gonadotropin in the blood or urine is a probable sign of pregnancy.

v Radiography isn’t usually used in a pregnant woman because it may harm the developing fetus. If radiography is essential, it should be performed only after 36 weeks’ gestation.

v A pregnant patient who has had rupture of the membranes or who is experiencing vaginal bleeding shouldn’t engage in sexual intercourse.

v Milia may occur as pinpoint spots over a neonate’s nose.

v The duration of a contraction is timed from the moment that the uterine muscle begins to tense to the moment that it reaches full relaxation. It’s measured in seconds.

v The union of a male and a female gamete produces a zygote, which divides into the fertilized ovum.

v The first menstrual flow is called menarche and may be anovulatory (infertile).

v Spermatozoa (or their fragments) remain in the vagina for 72 hours after sexual intercourse.

v Prolactin stimulates and sustains milk production.

v Strabismus is a normal finding in a neonate.

v A postpartum patient may resume sexual intercourse after the perineal or uterine wounds heal (usually within 4 weeks after delivery).

v A pregnant staff member shouldn’t be assigned to work with a patient who has cytomegalovirus infection because the virus can be transmitted to the fetus.

v Fetal demise is death of the fetus after viability.

v Respiratory distress syndrome develops in premature neonates because their alveoli lack surfactant.

v The most common method of inducing labor after artificial rupture of the membranes is oxytocin (Pitocin) infusion.

v After the amniotic membranes rupture, the initial nursing action is to assess the fetal heart rate.

v The most common reasons for cesarean birth are malpresentation, fetal distress, cephalopelvic disproportion, pregnancy-induced hypertension, previous cesarean birth, and inadequate progress in labor.

v Amniocentesis increases the risk of spontaneous abortion, trauma to the fetus or placenta, premature labor, infection, and Rh sensitization of the fetus.

v After amniocentesis, abdominal cramping or spontaneous vaginal bleeding may indicate complications.

v To prevent her from developing Rh antibodies, an Rh-negative primigravida should receive Rho(D) immune globulin (RhoGAM) after delivering an Rh-positive neonate.

v If a pregnant patient’s test results are negative for glucose but positive for acetone, the nurse should assess the patient’s diet for inadequate caloric intake.

v If a pregnant patient’s test results are negative for glucose but positive for acetone, the nurse should assess the patient’s diet for inadequate caloric intake.

v Rubella infection in a pregnant patient, especially during the first trimester, can lead to spontaneous abortion or stillbirth as well as fetal cardiac and other birth defects.

v A pregnant patient should take an iron supplement to help prevent anemia.

v Direct antiglobulin (direct Coombs’) test is used to detect maternal antibodies attached to red blood cells in the neonate.

v Nausea and vomiting during the first trimester of pregnancy are caused by rising levels of the hormone human chorionic gonadotropin.

v Before discharging a patient who has had an abortion, the nurse should instruct her to report bright red clots, bleeding that lasts longer than 7 days, or signs of infection, such as a temperature of greater than 100° F (37.8° C), foul-smelling vaginal discharge, severe uterine cramping, nausea, or vomiting.

v When informed that a patient’s amniotic membrane has broken, the nurse should check fetal heart tones and then maternal vital signs.

v The duration of pregnancy averages 280 days, 40 weeks, 9 calendar months, or 10 lunar months.

v The initial weight loss for a healthy neonate is 5% to 10% of birth weight.

v The normal hemoglobin value in neonates is 17 to 20 g/dl.

v Crowning is the appearance of the fetus’s head when its largest diameter is encircled by the vulvovaginal ring.

v A multipara is a woman who has had two or more pregnancies that progressed to viability, regardless of whether the offspring were alive at birth.

v In a pregnant patient, preeclampsia may progress to eclampsia, which is characterized by seizures and may lead to coma.

v The Apgar score is used to assess the neonate’s vital functions. It’s obtained at 1 minute and 5 minutes after delivery. The score is based on respiratory effort, heart rate, muscle tone, reflex irritability, and color.

v Because of the anti-insulin effects of placental hormones, insulin requirements increase during the third trimester.

v Gestational age can be estimated by ultrasound measurement of maternal abdominal circumference, fetal femur length, and fetal head size. These measurements are most accurate between 12 and 18 weeks’ gestation.

v Skeletal system abnormalities and ventricular septal defects are the most common disorders of infants who are born to diabetic women. The incidence of congenital malformation is three times higher in these infants than in those born to nondiabetic women.

v Skeletal system abnormalities and ventricular septal defects are the most common disorders of infants who are born to diabetic women. The incidence of congenital malformation is three times higher in these infants than in those born to nondiabetic women.

v The patient with preeclampsia usually has puffiness around the eyes or edema in the hands (for example, “I can’t put my wedding ring on.”).

v Kegel exercises require contraction and relaxation of the perineal muscles. These exercises help strengthen pelvic muscles and improve urine control in postpartum patients.

v Symptoms of postpartum depression range from mild postpartum blues to intense, suicidal, depressive psychosis.

v The preterm neonate may require gavage feedings because of a weak sucking reflex, uncoordinated sucking, or respiratory distress.

v Acrocyanosis (blueness and coolness of the arms and legs) is normal in neonates because of their immature peripheral circulatory system.

v To prevent ophthalmia neonatorum (a severe eye infection caused by maternal gonorrhea), the nurse may administer one of three drugs, as prescribed, in the neonate’s eyes: tetracycline, silver nitrate, or erythromycin.

v Neonatal testing for phenylketonuria is mandatory in most states.

v The nurse should place the neonate in a 30-degree Trendelenburg position to facilitate mucus drainage.

v The nurse may suction the neonate’s nose and mouth as needed with a bulb syringe or suction trap.

v To prevent heat loss, the nurse should place the neonate under a radiant warmer during suctioning and initial delivery-room care, and then wrap the neonate in a warmed blanket for transport to the nursery.

v The umbilical cord normally has two arteries and one vein.

v When providing care, the nurse should expose only one part of an infant’s body at a time.

v Lightening is settling of the fetal head into the brim of the pelvis.

v If the neonate is stable, the mother should be allowed to breast-feed within the neonate’s first hour of life.

v The nurse should check the neonate’s temperature every 1 to 2 hours until it’s maintained within normal limits.

v At birth, a neonate normally weighs 5 to 9 lb (2 to 4 kg), measures 18" to 22" (45.5 to 56 cm) in length, has a head circumference of 13½" to 14" (34 to 35.5 cm), and has a chest circumference that’s 1" (2.5 cm) less than the head circumference.

v In the neonate, temperature normally ranges from 98° to 99° F (36.7° to 37.2° C), apical pulse rate averages 120 to 160 beats/minute, and respirations are 40 to 60 breaths/minute.

v The diamond-shaped anterior fontanel usually closes between ages 12 and 18 months. The triangular posterior fontanel usually closes by age 2 months.

v In the neonate, a straight spine is normal. A tuft of hair over the spine is an abnormal finding.

v Prostaglandin gel may be applied to the vagina or cervix to ripen an unfavorable cervix before labor induction with oxytocin (Pitocin).

v Supernumerary nipples are occasionally seen on neonates. They usually appear along a line that runs from each axilla, through the normal nipple area, and to the groin.

v Meconium is a material that collects in the fetus’s intestines and forms the neonate’s first feces, which are black and tarry.

v The presence of meconium in the amniotic fluid during labor indicates possible fetal distress and the need to evaluate the neonate for meconium aspiration.

v To assess a neonate’s rooting reflex, the nurse touches a finger to the cheek or the corner of the mouth. Normally, the neonate turns his head toward the stimulus, opens his mouth, and searches for the stimulus.

v Harlequin sign is present when a neonate who is lying on his side appears red on the dependent side and pale on the upper side.

v Mongolian spots can range from brown to blue. Their color depends on how close melanocytes are to the surface of the skin. They most commonly appear as patches across the sacrum, buttocks, and legs.

v Mongolian spots are common in non-white infants and usually disappear by age 2 to 3 years.

v Vernix caseosa is a cheeselike substance that covers and protects the fetus’s skin in utero. It may be rubbed into the neonate’s skin or washed away in one or two baths.

v Caput succedaneum is edema that develops in and under the fetal scalp during labor and delivery. It resolves spontaneously and presents no danger to the neonate. The edema doesn’t cross the suture line.

v Nevus flammeus, or port-wine stain, is a diffuse pink to dark bluish red lesion on a neonate’s face or neck.

v The Guthrie test (a screening test for phenylketonuria) is most reliable if it’s done between the second and sixth days after birth and is performed after the neonate has ingested protein.

v To assess coordination of sucking and swallowing, the nurse should observe the neonate’s first breast-feeding or sterile water bottle-feeding.

v To establish a milk supply pattern, the mother should breast-feed her infant at least every 4 hours. During the first month, she should breast-feed 8 to 12 times daily (demand feeding).

v To avoid contact with blood and other body fluids, the nurse should wear gloves when handling the neonate until after the first bath is given.

v If a breast-fed infant is content, has good skin turgor, an adequate number of wet diapers, and normal weight gain, the mother’s milk supply is assumed to be adequate.

v In the supine position, a pregnant patient’s enlarged uterus impairs venous return from the lower half of the body to the heart, resulting in supine hypotensive syndrome, or inferior vena cava syndrome.

v Tocolytic agents used to treat preterm labor include terbutaline (Brethine), ritodrine (Yutopar), and magnesium sulfate.

v A pregnant woman who has hyperemesis gravidarum may require hospitalization to treat dehydration and starvation.

v Diaphragmatic hernia is one of the most urgent neonatal surgical emergencies. By compressing and displacing the lungs and heart, this disorder can cause respiratory distress shortly after birth.

v Common complications of early pregnancy (up to 20 weeks’ gestation) include fetal loss and serious threats to maternal health.

v Fetal embodiment is a maternal developmental task that occurs in the second trimester. During this stage, the mother may complain that she never gets to sleep because the fetus always gives her a thump when she tries.

v Visualization in pregnancy is a process in which the mother imagines what the child she’s carrying is like and becomes acquainted with it.

v Hemodilution of pregnancy is the increase in blood volume that occurs during pregnancy. The increased volume consists of plasma and causes an imbalance between the ratio of red blood cells to plasma and a resultant decrease in hematocrit.

v Mean arterial pressure of greater than 100 mm Hg after 20 weeks of pregnancy is considered hypertension.

v The treatment for supine hypotension syndrome (a condition that sometimes occurs in pregnancy) is to have the patient lie on her left side.

v A contributing factor in dependent edema in the pregnant patient is the increase of femoral venous pressure from 10 mm Hg (normal) to 18 mm Hg (high).

v Hyperpigmentation of the pregnant patient’s face, formerly called chloasma and now referred to as melasma, fades after delivery.

v The hormone relaxin, which is secreted first by the corpus luteum and later by the placenta, relaxes the connective tissue and cartilage of the symphysis pubis and the sacroiliac joint to facilitate passage of the fetus during delivery.

v Progesterone maintains the integrity of the pregnancy by inhibiting uterine motility.

v Ladin’s sign, an early indication of pregnancy, causes softening of a spot on the anterior portion of the uterus, just above the uterocervical juncture.

v During pregnancy, the abdominal line from the symphysis pubis to the umbilicus changes from linea alba to linea nigra.

v In neonates, cold stress affects the circulatory, regulatory, and respiratory systems.

v Obstetric data can be described by using the F/TPAL system:

o F/T: Full-term delivery at 38 weeks or longer

o P: Preterm delivery between 20 and 37 weeks

o A: Abortion or loss of fetus before 20 weeks

o L: Number of children living (if a child has died, further explanation is needed to clarify the discrepancy in numbers).

v Parity doesn’t refer to the number of infants delivered, only the number of deliveries.

v Women who are carrying more than one fetus should be encouraged to gain 35 to 45 lb (15.5 to 20.5 kg) during pregnancy.

v The recommended amount of iron supplement for the pregnant patient is 30 to 60 mg daily.

v Drinking six alcoholic beverages a day or a single episode of binge drinking in the first trimester can cause fetal alcohol syndrome.

v Chorionic villus sampling is performed at 8 to 12 weeks of pregnancy for early identification of genetic defects.

v In percutaneous umbilical blood sampling, a blood sample is obtained from the umbilical cord to detect anemia, genetic defects, and blood incompatibility as well as to assess the need for blood transfusions.

v The period between contractions is referred to as the interval, or resting phase. During this phase, the uterus and placenta fill with blood and allow for the exchange of oxygen, carbon dioxide, and nutrients.

v In a patient who has hypertonic contractions, the uterus doesn’t have an opportunity to relax and there is no interval between contractions. As a result, the fetus may experience hypoxia or rapid delivery may occur.

v Two qualities of the myometrium are elasticity, which allows it to stretch yet maintain its tone, and contractility, which allows it to shorten and lengthen in a synchronized pattern.

v During crowning, the presenting part of the fetus remains visible during the interval between contractions.

v Uterine atony is failure of the uterus to remain firmly contracted.

v The major cause of uterine atony is a full bladder.

v If the mother wishes to breast-feed, the neonate should be nursed as soon as possible after delivery.

v A smacking sound, milk dripping from the side of the mouth, and sucking noises all indicate improper placement of the infant’s mouth over the nipple.

v Before feeding is initiated, an infant should be burped to expel air from the stomach.

v Most authorities strongly encourage the continuation of breast-feeding on both the affected and the unaffected breast of patients with mastitis.

v Neonates are nearsighted and focus on items that are held 10" to 12" (25 to 30.5 cm) away.

v In a neonate, low-set ears are associated with chromosomal abnormalities such as Down syndrome.

v Meconium is usually passed in the first 24 hours; however, passage may take up to 72 hours.

v Boys who are born with hypospadias shouldn’t be circumcised at birth because the foreskin may be needed for constructive surgery.

v In the neonate, the normal blood glucose level is 45 to 90 mg/dl.

v Hepatitis B vaccine is usually given within 48 hours of birth.

v Hepatitis B immune globulin is usually given within 12 hours of birth.

v HELLP (hemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, and low platelets) syndrome is an unusual variation of pregnancy-induced hypertension.

v Maternal serum alpha-fetoprotein is detectable at 7 weeks of gestation and peaks in the third trimester. High levels detected between the 16th and 18th weeks are associated with neural tube defects. Low levels are associated with Down syndrome.

v An arrest of descent occurs when the fetus doesn’t descend through the pelvic cavity during labor. It’s commonly associated with cephalopelvic disproportion, and cesarean delivery may be required.

v A late sign of preeclampsia is epigastric pain as a result of severe liver edema.

v In the patient with preeclampsia, blood pressure returns to normal during the puerperal period.

v To obtain an estriol level, urine is collected for 24 hours.

v An estriol level is used to assess fetal well-being and maternal renal functioning as well as to monitor a pregnancy that’s complicated by diabetes.

v A pregnant patient with vaginal bleeding shouldn’t have a pelvic examination.

v In the early stages of pregnancy, the finding of glucose in the urine may be related to the increased shunting of glucose to the developing placenta, without a corresponding increase in the reabsorption capability of the kidneys.

v A patient who has premature rupture of the membranes is at significant risk for infection if labor doesn’t begin within 24 hours.

v Infants of diabetic mothers are susceptible to macrosomia as a result of increased insulin production in the fetus.

v To prevent heat loss in the neonate, the nurse should bathe one part of his body at a time and keep the rest of the body covered.

v A patient who has a cesarean delivery is at greater risk for infection than the patient who gives birth vaginally.

v The occurrence of thrush in the neonate is probably caused by contact with the organism during delivery through the birth canal.

v The nurse should keep the sac of meningomyelocele moist with normal saline solution.

v If fundal height is at least 2 cm less than expected, the cause may be growth retardation, missed abortion, transverse lie, or false pregnancy.

v Fundal height that exceeds expectations by more than 2 cm may be caused by multiple gestation, polyhydramnios, uterine myomata, or a large baby.

v A major developmental task for a woman during the first trimester of pregnancy is accepting the pregnancy.

v Unlike formula, breast milk offers the benefit of maternal antibodies.

v Spontaneous rupture of the membranes increases the risk of a prolapsed umbilical cord.

v A clinical manifestation of a prolapsed umbilical cord is variable decelerations.

v During labor, to relieve supine hypotension manifested by nausea and vomiting and paleness, turn the patient on her left side.

v If the ovum is fertilized by a spermatozoon carrying a Y chromosome, a male zygote is formed.

v Implantation occurs when the cellular walls of the blastocyte implants itself in the endometrium, usually 7 to 9 days after fertilization.

v Implantation occurs when the cellular walls of the blastocyte implants itself in the endometrium, usually 7 to 9 days after fertilization.

v Heart development in the embryo begins at 2 to 4 weeks and is complete by the end of the embryonic stage.

v Methergine stimulates uterine contractions.

v The administration of folic acid during the early stages of gestation may prevent neural tube defects.

v With advanced maternal age, a common genetic problem is Down syndrome.

v With early maternal age, cephalopelvic disproportion commonly occurs.

v In the early postpartum period, the fundus should be midline at the umbilicus.

v A rubella vaccine shouldn’t be given to a pregnant woman. The vaccine can be administered after delivery, but the patient should be instructed to avoid becoming pregnant for 3 months.

v A 16-year-old girl who is pregnant is at risk for having a low-birth-weight neonate.

v The mother’s Rh factor should be determined before an amniocentesis is performed.

v Maternal hypotension is a complication of spinal block.

v After delivery, if the fundus is boggy and deviated to the right side, the patient should empty her bladder.

v Before providing a specimen for a sperm count, the patient should avoid ejaculation for 48 to 72 hours.

v The hormone human chorionic gonadotropin is a marker for pregnancy.

v Painless vaginal bleeding during the last trimester of pregnancy may indicate placenta previa.

v During the transition phase of labor, the woman usually is irritable and restless.

v Because women with diabetes have a higher incidence of birth anomalies than women without diabetes, an alpha-fetoprotein level may be ordered at 15 to 17 weeks’ gestation.

v To avoid puncturing the placenta, a vaginal examination shouldn’t be performed on a pregnant patient who is bleeding.

v A patient who has postpartum hemorrhage caused by uterine atony should be given oxytocin as prescribed.

v Laceration of the vagina, cervix, or perineum produces bright red bleeding that often comes in spurts. The bleeding is continuous, even when the fundus is firm.

v Hot compresses can help to relieve breast tenderness after breast-feeding.

v The fundus of a postpartum patient is massaged to stimulate contraction of the uterus and prevent hemorrhage.

v A mother who has a positive human immunodeficiency virus test result shouldn’t breast-feed her infant.

v Dinoprostone (Cervidil) is used to ripen the cervix.

v Breast-feeding of a premature neonate born at 32 weeks’ gestation can be accomplished if the mother expresses milk and feeds the neonate by gavage.

v If a pregnant patient’s rubella titer is less than 1:8, she should be immunized after delivery.

v The administration of oxytocin (Pitocin) is stopped if the contractions are 90 seconds or longer.

v For an extramural delivery (one that takes place outside of a normal delivery center), the priorities for care of the neonate include maintaining a patent airway, supporting efforts to breathe, monitoring vital signs, and maintaining adequate body


v temperature.

v Subinvolution may occur if the bladder is distended after delivery.

v The nurse must place identification bands on both the mother and the neonate before they leave the delivery room.

v Erythromycin is given at birth to prevent ophthalmia neonatorum.

v Pelvic-tilt exercises can help to prevent or relieve backache during pregnancy.

v Before performing a Leopold maneuver, the nurse should ask the patient to empty her bladder.


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