Key Concepts
Overview
TIA Nursing Priorities focuses on acute neurovascular care: time-sensitive reperfusion eligibility, bleeding risk with thrombolytics, aspiration prevention, and neuro checks after intervention. NCLEX-RN rewards knowing what delays harm (silent aspiration, missed deficit, hypotension) versus routine tasks. Differentiate ischemic versus hemorrhagic patterns when the stem gives CT or presentation clues—tPA/TNK themes apply only when contraindications are absent per item framing. Integrate stroke assessment & tPA window, stroke & ICP nursing gold, increased ICP positioning, and Canada RN hub · US RN hub. Why it matters for nursing care: TIA Nursing Priorities requires early recognition, careful trend assessment, and rapid prioritization when the patient begins to deteriorate. Clinical decisions should connect 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: Examiners use first, priority, and most important language. Eliminate answers that delay assessment, delegate unstable neuro checks to UAP, or teach before stabilizing hypoxia, airway risk, or acute ICP signs. Expect SBAR and time documentation around stroke and seizure events. Watch for...
