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Seizure nursing care prioritizes safety, airway protection, timing, trigger assessment, medication adherence, and urgent escalation for prolonged events.
Read articleIncreased ICP is a neuro emergency pattern where subtle mental status changes can progress to herniation without timely recognition.
Read articleStroke nursing questions reward rapid recognition, last-known-well timing, airway and glucose checks, CT differentiation, and complication prevention.
Read articleDVT nursing care centers on risk recognition, limb assessment, PE prevention, anticoagulation safety, and patient teaching.
Read articlePulmonary embolism is a sudden ventilation-perfusion and right-heart strain emergency where recognition and escalation matter quickly.
Read articleAsthma emergencies combine bronchoconstriction, airway inflammation, mucus, and fatigue risk, so nursing priorities focus on rapid respiratory assessment and treatment response.
Read articleCOPD nursing care blends chronic symptom management with acute exacerbation recognition, oxygen safety, inhaler technique, and energy conservation.
Read articleRespiratory acid-base disorders start with ventilation: retained CO2 causes acidosis, excessive CO2 loss causes alkalosis.
Read articleUse bicarbonate direction, cause patterns, compensation, and patient safety cues to distinguish metabolic acidosis from metabolic alkalosis.
Read articleCalcium disorders are neuromuscular and cardiac safety questions: low calcium increases excitability, high calcium slows and weakens.
Read articleHypernatremia usually signals water deficit relative to sodium, making thirst access, neurologic status, and careful fluid correction essential.
Read articleHyponatremia is a water-sodium balance problem where neurologic assessment, cause recognition, and safe correction matter more than memorizing one number.
Read articleUnderstand beta blockers as sympathetic brake medications that affect heart rate, blood pressure, conduction, bronchospasm risk, and symptom masking.
Read articleSeparate warfarin from heparin by mechanism, monitoring, onset, reversal, patient teaching, and safety priorities for anticoagulation questions.
Read articleConnect digoxin's narrow therapeutic index with GI symptoms, visual changes, dysrhythmias, potassium shifts, renal function, and safe escalation.
Read articleRecognize sepsis as dysregulated infection response with organ dysfunction, perfusion failure risk, and time-sensitive nursing escalation.
Read articleUse forward flow and congestion patterns to distinguish left-sided and right-sided heart failure in nursing exams and bedside assessment.
Read articleUse perfusion, nephron injury, and obstruction to organize acute kidney injury assessment, lab trends, urine findings, and safe nursing priorities.
Read articleSeparate DKA from HHS by insulin deficit, ketones, acidosis, osmolality, dehydration severity, and the nursing actions that protect patients during treatment.
Read articleCompare SIADH and diabetes insipidus as opposite water-balance disorders so sodium, urine output, neurologic risk, and priority nursing actions make sense.
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