NURS612 Exam 1 Review-Chen Walta - Week1-3
NURS612 Exam 1 Review-Chen Walta - Week1-3
NURS612 Exam 1 Review-Chen Walta - Week1-3
MOUTH:
The way the ear looks related to when its healing, perforated, fungi, etc…..this information
is in the text within its own box
Signs Associated conditions/causes
Retracted with no mobility Obstruction of eustachian tube with or without middle ear effusion
Mobility with negative pressure only Obstruction of eustachian tube with or without middle ear effusion
Color: amber or yellow Serous fluid in middle ear (otitis media with effusion)
▪ gradual onset of blurred vision and increased sensitivity to glare (especially when driving at
dusk or night)
▪ sight-limiting cataract is an insensitivity to subtle color differences such as those caused by
food stains on clothing in an otherwise neatly dressed patient
▪ white haze in the pupil during pupil testing suggests a moderate or worse cataract
▪ With the pupil dilated, the red eye reflex may exhibit focal or diffuse areas of darkness when
viewed with the direct ophthalmoscope or a slit lamp
Cataracts Pathophysiology:
o Most commonly from denaturation of lens protein caused by aging
o With aging, cataracts are generally central
o Peripheral cataracts may occur in hypoparathyroidism
o Medications such as steroids can cause cataracts
o Congenital cataracts can result from a number of genetic defects, maternal infections
such as rubella, or other fetal insults during the first trimester of pregnancy
Subjective Data:
o Cloudy or blurry vision
o Faded colors
o Headlights, lamps, or sunlight may appear too bright
o Halo may appear around lights
o Poor night vision or double vision
o Frequent prescription changes
Objective Data:
o Cloudiness of the lens, often obvious without special viewing equipment
Age related macular degeneration (AMD): disease that progressively destroys the macula,
impairing central vision
■ because glaucoma is often asymptomatic, most patients fail to notice changes in vision until
end-stage disease
■ Clinical examination for glaucoma includes measurement of IOP (tonometry), optic disc
assessment, visual field assessment and gonioscopy to assess whether the intraocular
drainage system is “open” or “closed.”
■ Intra-occular pressure (IOP) normally ranges from 10–21 mm Hg; however, IOP outside of
this range is not pathognomonic for glaucoma—it is simply a risk factor associated with the
development and/or progression of the disease
■ Glaucomatous atrophy causes increased optic nerve cupping; markedly asymmetric cupping
between the 2 eyes can indicate glaucoma. optic disc findings are usually observed before
visual field losses appear
Glaucoma Pathophysiology
o Acute angle may occur acutely with dramatically elevated intraocular pressure if the
iris blocks the exit of aqueous humor from the anterior chamber
o Open angle caused by decreasing aqueous humor absorption leads to increased
resistance and painless buildup of pressure in the eye
o May also be congenital as a result of improper development of the eye’s aqueous
outflow system
Subjective Data:
o Open-angle glaucoma: symptoms are absent except for a gradual loss of peripheral
vision over a period of years
o Acute glaucoma: intense ocular pain, blurred vision, halos around lights, a red eye,
and a dilated pupil
o Occasionally: stomach pain, nausea, & vomiting
Objective Data:
o During dilated eyes there is an increased cupping of the optic nerve
o Visual field tests may show loss of peripheral vision
1. Examine the patient’s right eye with your right eye and the left with your left to reduce
unintentional nose to nose contact.
2. Hold the ophthalmoscope in the hand that corresponds to the examining eye
3. Change the lens of the ophthalmoscope with your index finger; start with the lens at 0, and
stabilize yourself and the patient by placing your free hand on the patient’s shoulder or head
4. The focus wheel is adjusted by your thumb
5. With the patient looking at a distant fixation point, direct the light of the ophthalmoscope at
the pupil from about 12 in away and visualize the red reflex first.
6. As you approach the eye the retinal details should become apparent. With a blood vessel
being the 1st thing you see at 3-5 cm from the patient.
7. If your patient is myopic (nearsighted) use the minus (red) lens
8. If patient is hyperoptic (farsighted) or aphakic (lacks a lens) use the plus lens
9. Look at the optic disc
10. Next look at the vascular supply of the retina
11. Now inspect the optic disc
12. Next examine the macula (fovea centralis) which may not be visible because of pupillary
response.
GENERAL PATIENT CARE:
Know how to ask culturally sensitive questions…..if someone of a different culture comes in
with pain how would you address that? By asking them what questions?
RESPECT MODEL:
▪ Rapport:
o Connect on a social level
o See the patient’s point of view
o Consciously suspended judgement; recognize and avoid making assumptions
▪ Empathy:
o Remember the patient has come to you for help
o Seek out and understand the patient’s rationale for his/her behaviors and illness
o Verbally acknowledge and legitimize the patient’s feelings
▪ Support:
o Ask about and understand the barriers to care and compliance
o Help the patient overcome barriers; Involve family members if appropriate
o Reassure the patient you are and will be available to help
▪ Partnership:
o Be flexible
o Negotiate roles when necessary
o Stress that you are working together to address health problems
▪ Explanations:
o Check often for understanding
o Use verbal clarification techniques
▪ Cultural competence:
o Respect the patient’s cultural beliefs
o Understand that the patient’s view of you may be defined by ethnic and cultural
stereotypes
o Be aware of your own cultural biases and preconceptions
o Know your limitations in addressing health issues across cultures
o Understand your personal style and recognize when it may not be working with a
given patient
▪ Trust:
o Recognize that self-disclosure may be difficult for some patients; Consciously work
to establish trust
Exam layout: 20 questions (10 MC & 10 SA (some ?s have 2 part))- 60 minutes to complete
Do MC first and then SA
• Focus on how you would collect health history data
o Talking to patients from different cultures
o Talking to patients where there is a language barrier
EYES
Know normal and abnormal: example redness or swelling to eyelids
Assess eye: assess congunctiva and sclerea
What tests would you use to check vision acuity?
o Rosenbaum (near-sighted vision)
o Snellen (Far-sighted vision)
Know some red flags of the eye (send to ED or eye doctor):
o Uneven pupils (especially with HA)
o Sudden loss of vision
o Floaters/ flashes (retinal detachment possible)
When a patient has retinal detachment what is their main complaint? “curtain” feeling,
floaters or flashes
How do you check for glaucoma? Check extraocular pressure/ (can use Tonipen to measure)
• Know how to do an external exam of the eyes
o Know how to identify bacterial conjunctivitis vs allergic conjunctivitis
▪ Bacterial- starts in one eye and spreads to the other, yellow/ crusty
drainage
▪ Allergic- both eyes, puffy and/ or runny
What are you looking for when you have a patient follow your finger with their eyes?
o Cardinal fields of gaze (testing cranial nerves 3,4, & 6)
• When completing an eye exam you want to look at the outside of the eye? Look at
eyelids and make sure not swollen, look at the conjunctiva/ sclera, then use
ophthalmoscope to look at the inside of the eye, check cardinal gazes (checks cranial
nerves 3,4, & 6)
• How to use the Ophthalmoscope:
o Examine the patient’s right eye with your right eye and the left with your left to
reduce unintentional nose to nose contact.
o Hold the ophthalmoscope in the hand that corresponds to the examining eye
o Change the lens of the ophthalmoscope with your index finger; start with the lens
at 0, and stabilize yourself and the patient by placing your free hand on the
patient’s shoulder or head
o The focus wheel is adjusted by your thumb
o With the patient looking at a distant fixation point, direct the light of the
ophthalmoscope at the pupil from about 12 in away and visualize the red reflex
first.
o As you approach the eye the retinal details should become apparent. With a blood
vessel being the 1st thing you see at 3-5 cm from the patient.
▪ If your patient is myopic (nearsighted) use the minus (red) lens
▪ If patient is hyperoptic (farsighted) or aphakic (lacks a lens) use the plus
lens
o Look at the optic disc
o Next look at the vascular supply of the retina
o Now inspect the optic disc
o Next examine the macula (fovea centralis) which may not be visible because of
pupillary response.
EARS:
Know normal and abnormal findings
Know differences between Otitis Externa and Otitis Media
• Otitis media- middle ear
• Otitis externa/ “swimmers ear”- ear canal
When doing an ear exam what do you start out looking at? Look at the outer structures of the
ear then palpate
If you look at the outside of the ear and you see drainage, is this normal or abnormal?
ADNORMAL
What is your differential diagnoses if you see this? Otitis Externa, Otitis Media, Ear effusion,
or foreign body in the ear
• What kind of patients get Otitis Externa? Swimmers, breast/ bottle fed children
• When you do ear tests, what are other things that you look for? Look at the TM
(whether it is perforated or not), look at the light, look at the canal (whether it is swollen
or red, look for cerumen impaction)
• Exam external ear→ pull tragus and palpate the preauricular and post auricular lymph
nodes and mastoid area
• What is the worst differential diagnosis for a patient that comes in with an ear
infection? Mastoid infection or meningitis
o Mastoid is bone that connects the ear canal with the skull, people with chronic ear
infections can get mastoid infections. If patient comes in saying that ear pain has
been over 2 weeks make sure that you palpate the mastoid area to make sure that
there is no erythema)
• What tests do you do to test hearing?
o Whisper/ watch test
o Rinne test - tuning fork over mastoid process and then placed in front of the ear-
tests Bone conduction – bone conduction should be longer than bone conduction
o Weber- tuning fork midline of skull→ hearing should be the same in both ears
• Vertigo
o You have a 42 y/o female that comes in to you saying “I have dizziness”
▪ What are some of your differential diagnoses? Ear infection,
Meniere’s disease, vertigo
▪ What are some of the tests that you can do to decide if it is vertigo
or not? Dix Hallpike maneuver (Head tilt and lay back maneuver)→ used
to diagnosis benign postural vertigo.
MOUTH:
When assessing the mouth what are some things that you should be looking for? Color,
lesions, tonsils, uvula, erythema, oral ulcers, teeth
What are some tests that you would run if you see a patient with oral ulcers that are not
resolving? Check for HIV and syphilis
What is the number one virus that causes oral ulcers with fever? Herpes Simplex
• Make sure if a patient comes in with any complaints of mouth problems that you
ask if they are a smoker or not!!
• What else would you want to know on a history of a patient that comes in with
lesions or mouth sores? Tobacco use, stress, immunocompromised (cancer,
transplant hx, HIV/AIDs, or on immunosuppressant drugs)
• What are some other types of mouth sores that you will see in a clinic on
patients? Herpes lesions
• What does a Herpes lesion look like? Vesicular lesion
• If a patient comes in with a herpes lesion or shingles in face, what is the number
one thing that you would think of and send this patient to the emergency
department? Make sure that you examine and assess the patient’s eyes and ears!!! (If
they have lesions so close to the eyes then they can get shingles in their eye and it can
affect their optic nerve)→ can cause optic neuritis!!!
• What is the number one thing that you should document on a sinusitis patient?
o Length of symptoms (to know whether to treat viral or bacterial)
o Document assessment: purulent rhinorrhea, pharyngeal symptoms, maxillary and
frontal sinus tenderness
o Educate:
▪ Take Flonase, do sinus rinse, take allergy medications.
▪ Reassure them that they don’t need an antibiotic unless it has been 7-10
days with infection of febrile.
• How would you diagnose a patient with an allergy? Clear rhinorrhea as opposed to
purulent, throat irritation, post nasal drip
• Where do you want the uvula to be? Midline
• What if the uvula is not midline? Suspect a problem on the opposite side that the
uvula deviates
• What differential diagnoses would you think of if the uvula is deviated?
Peritonsillar abscess
Eyes: know the difference between cataracts/ retinal detachment and glaucoma
• When you are taking a history on a patient is it best to ask straight forward
questions or open ended questions? Start with open-ended and then narrow it down
as to closed .
Other Resources:
https://quizlet.com/186412053/maryville-612-exam-1-advanced-health-assessment-flash-cards/
https://quizlet.com/267830165/maryville-612-exam-1-flash-cards/
https://www.studyblue.com/notes/note/n/aha-test-1/deck/21116607
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Es4oSQjNvCI
https://quizlet.com/315329216/maryville-612-exam-1-workbook-multiple-choice-flash-
cards/?i=518qs&x=1jqq
https://www.khanacademy.org/science/health-and-medicine/circulatory-system-diseases/heart-
valve-diseases/v/systolic-murmurs-diastolic-murmurs-and-extra-heart-sounds-part-1
https://soundcloud.com/taylor-rae-loudermilk/aha-nurs-612-exam-1-possible-short-answer-
questions
https://soundcloud.com/taylor-rae-loudermilk/aha-nurs-612-exam-1-possible-short-answer-questions
https://soundcloud.com/taylor-rae-loudermilk/aha-nurs-612-exam-1-1
https://soundcloud.com/taylor-rae-loudermilk/aha-nurs-612-exam-1-2
https://soundcloud.com/taylor-rae-loudermilk/aha-nurs-612-exam-1-3
https://soundcloud.com/taylor-rae-loudermilk/aha-nurs-612-exam-1-heart-sound-locations