Key Concepts
Overview
Why it matters for nursing care: Breast Engorgement (Exam notes batch 4) is clinically important because it requires early recognition, careful trend assessment, and rapid prioritization when the patient begins to deteriorate. A key nursing priority is connecting the underlying pathophysiology to the bedside picture so the nurse can distinguish a stable finding from a red flag that changes urgency, monitoring frequency, and provider communication. Exam relevance: NCLEX-RN items test why Breast Engorgement (Exam notes batch 4) matters clinically, which cues should change nursing priority, and what the nurse should do first when ABCs, perfusion, pain, or safety are competing. The topic is encountered across common nursing settings such as the emergency department, medical-surgical units, telemetry, critical care, perioperative areas, community follow-up, and discharge teaching. A strong answer does not memorize isolated facts; it explains why a finding is clinically important, how nursing priorities change as severity rises, and which complications require urgent escalation. On the exam, writers often pair stable-sounding options with unstable data—notice the mismatch before you commit. If the stem names a license or role, reread that...
