Denise Spoon

208 Chapter 7 Questionsy All Nurses % (N=279) Nurses teaching hospitals % (n=178) Nurses university hospital % (n=87) Nurses general hospital % (n=14) All Prescribers % (N=25) Prescribers teaching hospitals % (n=14) Prescribers university hospital % (n=9) Prescribers general hospital % (n=2) P-values 7.The physician asks you to get glucose for a patient with severe hypoglycemia; you see glucose 5%, 10% and 20%, which one do you take? 0.888& 20% glucose solution 57.7 (161) 52.2 (93) 67.8 (59) 64.3 (9) 56.0 (14) 64.3 (9) 33.3 (3) 100 (2) 5% glucose solution 22.2 (62) 24.7 (44) 16.1 (14) 28.6 (4) 20.0 (5) 7.1 (1) 44.4 (4) 0 10% glucose solution 20.1 (56) 23.0 (41) 16.1 (14) 7.1 (1) 24.0 (6) 28.6 (4) 22.2 (2) 0 8. Which action suits best for a patient who is responsive and allowed to eat and drink normally, with a hypokalemia of 2.8? .669 Potassium drink, if the patient is able to drink 62.4 (174) 62.4 (111) 69.0 (60) 21.4 (3) 68.0 (17) 71.4 (10) 66.7 (6) 50 (1) Start with a potassium infusion in combination with sodium chloride 0.9% solution 35.8 (100) 34.8 (62) 31.0 (27) 78.6 (11) 32.0 (8) 28.6 (4) 33.3 (3) 50 (1) Start with lactated Ringer’s solution 1.8 (5) 2.8 (5) 0 0 0 0 0 0 9. The daily reference intake of salt is 6 grams per day. For cardiac patients and patients witch renal failure on a low-sodium diet, the reference intake is lower. How much salt contains 1 liter of sodium chloride 0.9%? .094 9 grams 41.9 (117) 41.0 (73) 47.1 (41) 21.4 (3) 60.0 (15) 57.1 (8) 55.6 (5) 100 (2) 0.9 grams 40.5 (113) 42.1 (75) 35.6 (31) 50.0 (7) 20.0 (5) 21.4 (3) 22.2 (2) 0 9 milligrams 17.6 (49) 16.9 (30) 17.2 (15) 28.6 (4) 20.0 (5) 21.4 (3) 22.2 (2) 0 10.What are possible symptoms of hypernatremia? .090 Thirst, confusion, neurological deficit, nausea 88.2 (246) 88.2 (157) 88.5 (77) 85.7 (12) 100 (25) 100 (14) 100 (9) 100 (2) Diarrhea, dyspnea, white skin color 5.7 (16) 7.3 (13) 3.4 (3) 0 0 0 0 0 Loss of appetite, losing weight, lethargy 6.1 (17) 4.5 (8) 8.0 (7) 14.3 (2) 0 0 0 0

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTk4NDMw