Welcome to the "Chest Tube Management Review: NCLEX Quiz" – an interactive test designed to assess your knowledge and understanding of chest tube management principles. Take this chest tube review quiz and test your knowledge. A chest tube is a plastic tube used to drain air or fluid from the chest. Get ready and complete the following quiz to see See morehow much you know. The quiz is going to increase your knowledge about chest tubes.
Mastering the intricacies of chest tube care is crucial for healthcare professionals, especially those preparing for the NCLEX examination. Throughout this quiz, you'll encounter questions covering various aspects of chest tube management, from recognizing indications for chest tube placement to troubleshooting complications. Whether you're a nursing student gearing up for the NCLEX or a healthcare professional seeking a refresher, this quiz will challenge your knowledge and enhance your confidence in managing chest tube systems. Let's go for it! We wish you good luck.
It is positive at rest.
It is negative during inhalation; positive during exhalation.
It is positive during inhalation; negative during exhalation.
It is negative at rest.
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An open pneumothorax
A closed pneumothorax
A hemothorax
A pleural effusion
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An open pneumothorax
A tension pneumothorax
An iatrogenic pneumothorax
A spontaneous pneumothorax
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Allows water to be added to the system without disconnecting the patient tubing
Alerts the nurse to a situation of high pressure within the system and automatically vents
Allows filtered atmospheric air into the system to offset a rise in negative pressure
Alerts the nurse to high suction levels accumulating in the system
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The amount of suction set on the wall vacuum regulator
The sensitivity of the high negative pressure relief valve
The dial setting on the suction control chamber
The level of water in the water seal chamber
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Adjust the vacuum source until the dial on the vacuum regulator reads -20mmHg
Adjust the vacuum source until constant, gentle bubbling just begins in the suction control chamber
Adjust the vacuum source until the bellows indicator is all the way to the right of the indicator window
Adjust the vacuum source until the bellows indicator reaches the arrow mark in the indicator window
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Cover the opening with a sterile dressing taped on three sides
Cover the opening with a sterile Vaseline gauze, taped securely on all sides
Leave the opening alone and monitor the patient until a physician can assess the situation.
Try to put the tube back in place as quickly as possible
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The tubing is coiled on the bed with a straight path to the chest drain.
The tubing is blocked in some way.
The patient is receiving positive pressure ventilation.
The patient is ambulatory.
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Continue to monitor the water seal chamber for bubbling every hour for the next four hours.
Do nothing. This bubbling is normal in patients with pleural chest tubes.
Call the physician immediately and do not leave the patient's bedside because of the risk of respiratory failure.
Remove the chest tube dressing to see if one or more eyelets of the chest tube have been pulled out of the chest.
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When ordered by a physician to simulate tube removal and assess the patient's response
Whenever a patient leaves the nursing unit and cannot be monitored
When ambulating a postoperative patient with a chest tube
It is never beneficial to clamp a patient's chest tube.
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Drainage is approximately 100mL/hr in a patient with a pleural chest tube following spinal surgery.
The chest radiograph shows only a small residual pneumothorax in a patient requiring mechanical ventilation.
Bubbling in the water seal has been absent for 24 hours following iatrogenic pneumothorax from CVP placement.
Fluctuations in the water seal are approximately 2 to 4cmH2O with each breathing cycle.
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It indicates the patency of the tubing by tidying with inspiration and expiration.
It allows air to enter the pleural space but prevent air from exiting the pleural space through the chest tube.
It allows air to exit the pleural space but prevent air from entering the pleural space through the chest tube.
It allows air to move freely in and out of the pleural space through the chest tube.
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Momentary tipping-over of the Atrium drainage system.
Evaporation of the water in the water seal chamber below the 2 cm mark.
Suction removed or turned off.
The drainage chambers are full.
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To provide oxygen to the lungs
To drain excess fluid from the pleural space
To remove air from the pleural space
To measure intrathoracic pressure
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Quiz Review Timeline (Updated): Mar 12, 2024 +
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