00:01
The nurses assigned to four clients
in a long term care facility.
00:05
Which client has the highest risk
for pulmonary edema?
Okay, we have a lot of
key words in this one.
00:12
So, the nurse, that's me,
is assigned to four clients.
00:17
And what's my setting?
Long term care facility?
All right,
I've got a feeling of what that is.
00:23
These are people who
couldn't live on their own, right.
00:26
They need some type of
oversight, and care, and support,
but they're not sick enough to
be in an acute care facility.
00:35
So like a hospital, in-patient.
00:38
So, I've got clients.
I've got four of them.
00:40
I'm in a long term care facility.
00:44
Which client has the
highest risk for?
Stop right there and
make sure you're clear.
00:49
Pulmonary edema.
00:52
Okay, so really what this
question is asking me,
who has the highest risk
for pulmonary edema?
Now, it says the what?
The highest risk
for pulmonary edema.
01:06
That's the key word that tells me.
01:08
Oh, more than one person might
have a risk for pulmonary edema.
01:13
I have to pick the one
that has the highest risk
for pulmonary edema.
01:18
Now, I know I'm doing that goofy,
because anything that will
make things stick in your mind,
I'll do whatever it takes.
01:25
And I even hope when you're reading
these questions in your own head,
you hear weird voices
in your own mind
to make sure you don't
miss a key component.
01:35
So that's the topic
of the question.
01:36
You're looking for who has the
highest risk for pulmonary edema?
We're going to bring
those four patients in.
01:43
We're going to ask you to
eliminate them one at a time
by asking yourself.
01:48
Is answer choice number one have the
highest risk for pulmonary edema?
Well, first,
you're going to see if they have
a risk for pulmonary edema.
01:56
And then you're going
to compare that one
to the other three answer choices.
02:00
Now start at four,
start at two, start at one,
we don't care.
02:05
As long as you work
through each one.
02:07
And you compare those
answers to each other.
02:09
You're going to get
the best answer.
02:12
All right,
I'll see in a couple of minutes.
02:13
Pause the video.
02:15
Take your time. Do your best.
02:17
And we'll come back and walk
through the question together.
02:28
Hey, welcome back.
02:30
Hey, thank you for taking the time
to do the work on your own.
02:33
That is really where your effort
is going to pay off
into higher performance.
02:38
Now, number one.
02:40
A client who has
right ventricular hypertrophy.
02:45
Are they at the highest
risk for pulmonary edema?
Okay, well, if you have
right ventricular hypertrophy,
what do you remember
about the heart?
Remember, blood enters here.
02:57
You've got the right atrium,
the tricuspid, the right ventricle.
03:00
Oh, if that right ventricles job
is to push blood to the lungs.
03:07
If the pressures
in the lungs are super high,
that right ventricle works
harder, harder, harder.
03:13
And then sometimes
it gets like overstretched
and it just can't
still strong anymore.
03:18
So, I'm going to keep number one.
Not ready to get rid of it yet.
03:23
Number two.
03:25
Compared to number one
is number two at a higher risk
for pulmonary edema?
While client with pneumonia.
03:32
That means they've got some type of
infection going on in their lung.
03:37
Is that the highest risk
for pulmonary edema?
No. Because pulmonary edema
is like fluid volume overload,
Now their lungs are going
to sound junky, probably.
03:46
They're going to look
kind of achy on an x-ray,
but I'm not as concerned
about pulmonary edema
as I am with the client
in number one for now.
03:56
Number three. A client who
has congestive heart failure.
04:02
Oh yeah.
04:03
They have a risk
of pulmonary edema.
04:05
In fact, that's the worst
case scenario for somebody
with congestive heart failure.
04:11
So, compare number
three to number one.
04:13
Yeah, a bigger problem than
right ventricular hypertrophy
would be congestive heart failure.
04:20
Now, here's why.
04:22
If I know they have right
ventricular hypertrophy,
things are going to start
backing up, right?
Ventricle, on atrium,
out to the rest of the body.
04:30
So we're not likely
to see pulmonary edema
caused by right
ventricular hypertrophy.
04:36
So someone has this right
ventricular hypertrophy,
because their lung
pressures were high.
04:42
Expect to look for fluid to have
backed up to the rest of the body.
04:47
You know they have the bilateral
edema in their extremities
and might have some
issues with their liver.
04:53
Pulmonary edema is a problem
when the left ventricle
can't push blood out to
the rest of the all right.
05:01
So it starts backing up.
05:03
Well, it backs up from
the left ventricle,
to the left atrium,
and back into the lungs.
05:10
That's why somebody with
congestive heart failure
has a higher risk for pulmonary
edema than number one.
05:17
So I'm keeping
number three in there.
05:18
But I am not stopping there.
05:20
Because number four might be
an even better answer. Let's look.
05:24
A client who has
orthostatic hypotension
due to autonomic dysfunction.
05:31
Do they have a higher risk
for pulmonary edema?
Okay, well, they're not
having a good day, right?
If they have
orthostatic hypotension,
what's going on?
Well, if they're laying down
and they sit up too quickly,
or they're sitting and they
stand up too quickly,
they can pass out. Right?
And that's because they've got an
autonomic dysfunction going on.
05:53
Is that a good thing?
No.
05:55
Is it a safety factor?
Yes.
05:57
Is it the topic of the question?
No.
06:01
Right?
So if you don't make sure
you do the work
to know the topic of the question,
you can get caught
by one of these answers,
because it is definitely
a safety problem.
06:12
Somebody has to be
very careful about
going from lying to sitting,
and staying there for a while
until their body stabilizes.
06:19
And then when they go
from sitting to standing,
they have to do the same thing
and have something
to study themselves.
06:26
That's a safety issue.
06:27
But that is not the
question that's being asked.
06:31
And that's how you can pick -
Wow, a really cool answer
for another question.
06:37
Not what you want.
06:38
It's number three, a client who has
congestive heart failure.
06:42
Okay, we spend a lot of time
talking about that one.
06:45
First off,
whether you get it right or wrong,
let's not talk about that now.
06:49
I want you to think about
in our conversations and
talking about the rationale.
06:53
Is there anything that you need
to write down in your notebook
to remember?
Was it something about how the cause
of right ventricular hypertrophy
is often high
pressures in the lungs?
Was it something that when you have
right ventricular hypertrophy
to the point that
it's not effective,
that blood starts backing
up into the right atrium,
and now to the rest of the body,
right.
07:14
And issues with your liver.
07:15
You don't feel good GI
And you've got bilateral edema.
07:22
Is it pneumonia?
When we talked about lung sounds?
What is it that you individually
need to write in your notebook,
so that you'll remember it when
you go over and review these notes?
See, that's the cool thing
about studying together.
07:34
We're creating a study
guide that is just for you.
07:38
Don't take somebody else's notes.
07:40
Do the work.
07:42
Make your own notes.
07:43
And this is going to make
a fantastic study guide
that is individualized and
personalized, just for you.
07:50
You're welcome.
07:51
Really, you're the one
doing the hard work.
07:53
So, hang in there. Keep doing it.
It's not fun.
07:56
But it can be
because when you start to
see the results pay off,
you're going to fall in
love with that notebook
and the work and effort
that you're putting into it.
08:06
So, if you got it right,
if you got it wrong,
what needs to go in your notes about
the rationales of these questions?
Maybe some of the patho.
08:15
Do you understand why you pick
the answer that you did?
Is there something missing?
What can you take
from this question,
and apply to the next question
or another question on your exam?
Ready?
Let's go do some more.