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Sem 2 Ch 8 Cardiovascular Peripheral Vascular Disorder


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Lexie Rae Negron


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[Front]


What does the Peripheral vascular system consists of?
[Back]


Arteries, Capillaries and veins

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Sem 2 Ch 8 Cardiovascular Peripheral Vascular Disorder - Marcador

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Sem 2 Ch 8 Cardiovascular Peripheral Vascular Disorder - Detalles

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What is PATCH?
Pulse Appearance Temperature Capillary refill Hardness Edema
What is PATCH helpful for? [ Mnemonic device ]
A uniform assessment and documentation technique for veins and arteries
Capillary refill time/timing
Apply pressure to a toenail or fingernail for several sec until it blanches "loses color" Relieve pressure Note amount of time it takes for color to return should return instantly in less than 2 seconds with an arterial disorder, it will take more than 2 sec for color to return
Signs and Symptoms associated with Arterial disorders
Pain that is aching to sharp cramping brought on by exercise relieved by rest Pulses diminished or absent Edema usually absent Skin changes cool or cold dry shiny hairless pallor develops with elevation
Signs and Symptoms associated with Venous disorders
Aching to cramping relieved by activity or elevating extremity Pulses Usually present Edema usually present increases at end of day when extremity is in a dependent position Skin changes warm thick and toughened darkened pigmentation stasis ulcers
When interpreting an ECG, the nurse would keep in mind which of the following about the P wave? Select all that apply
Reflects electrical impulse beginning at the SA node Reflects atrial muscle depolarization Has a duration of normally 0.11 seconds or less In a client who has had an ECG, the P wave represents the activation of the electrical impulse in the SA node, which is then transmitted to the AV node. In addition, the P wave represents atrial muscle depolarization, not ventricular depolarization. The normal duration of the P wave is 0.11 seconds or less in duration and 2.5 mm or more in height.
When teaching a client about propranolol hydrochloride, the nurse should base the information on the knowledge that propranolol hydrochloride:
Blocks beta-adrenergic stimulation and thus causes decreased heart rate, myocardial contractility, and Conduction Blocks beta-adrenergic stimulation and thus causes decreased heart rate, myocardial contractility, and conduction
During the previous few months, a 56-year-old woman felt brief twinges of chest pain while working in her garden and has had frequent episodes of indigestion. She comes to the hospital after experiencing severe anterior chest pain while raking leaves. Her evaluation confirms a diagnosis of stable angina pectoris. After stabilization and treatment, the client is discharged from the hospital. At her follow-up appointment, she is discouraged because she is experiencing pain with increasing frequency. She states that she is visiting an invalid friend twice a week and now cannot walk up the second flight of steps to the friend’s apartment without pain. Which of the following measures that the nurse could suggest would most likely help the client deal with this problem?Take a nitroglycerin tablet before climbing the stairs
The nurse teaches the client with angina about the common expected side effects of nitroglycerin, including:
Headache Because of the widespread vasodilating effects, nitroglycerin often produces such side effects as headache, hypotension, and dizziness. The client should lie or sit down to avoid fainting.
Sublingual nitroglycerin tablets begin to work within 1 to 2 minutes. How should the nurse instruct the client to use the drug when chest pain occurs?
Take one (1) tablet, then an additional tablet every 5 minutes for a total of three (3) tablets. Call the physician if pain persists after three (3) tablets.
A client has frequent bursts of ventricular tachycardia on the cardiac monitor. A nurse is most concerned with this dysrhythmia because:
It can develop into ventricular fibrillation at any time Ventricular tachycardia is a life-threatening dysrhythmia that results from an irritable ectopic focus that takes over as the pacemaker for the heart.
Your patient is beginning a warfarin [coumadin] regimen for the diagnosis of atrial fibrillation. your patient will be expected to
Vitamin k rich foods broccoli leafy greens bleeding and hemorhage monitoring frequent lab studies black tarry stools
A radioactive isotope [radioisotope] that is transported actively into normal cells
Thallium-201 If cells are ischemic or infarcted, the thallium will not be picked up
Where does Thallium concentrate?
In tissue with normal blood flow; tissue with inadequate perfusion appears as dark areas on scanning a "cold spot"
On occasion, a murmur swishing sound can be heard in the heart sounds, this can be a normal functional phenomenon produced by
Rapid filling of the ventricles orit can be an abnormal condition produced by ineffective closure of the valves
What is the order of blood flow?
Artery Arteriole Capillary Venule Vein
To sustain life the heart must
Pump blood throughout the body on a continuous basis
Blood flows into the heart muscle by way of two small vessels which are the right and left coronary arteries and wrap around the
Myocardium, the openings into these vessels lie behind the flaps of the Aortic Semilunar valves