Comment the answer! A client with a 6-month history of abdominal pain and intermittent diarrhea presents with recent weight loss, fatigue, and a colonoscopy showing patchy inflammation with a cobblestone appearance. Which nursing action takes priority? A. Administer antidiarrheal medication B. Encourage high-fiber diet C. Monitor for fistula formation D. Place client on strict NPO status Think critically—what makes this condition different? Comment your answer below + tag a study buddy Li...
Comment the word “Kidney” below because the video lesson has SO much more! We’ll send it to you! High yield notes ⤵️ Thanks for being here and make sure you don’t miss any of our posts because they WILL be helpful! Follow along here 👉🏼 @rev.med In pharmacology, we look at the bigger picture so leave the smaller tubules alone for this one time. Swipe through the posts to see Nephron anatomy and more related to the Kidney. ✅ 5 Types of Diuretics & Mnemonics 1️⃣ Carbonic anhydrase inhibito...
🧵 Types of Sutures are classified based on several key characteristics. Here’s a structured breakdown to help you understand them clearly: 🧬 Based on Absorbability • Absorbable Sutures: Naturally broken down by the body over time.• Examples: Vicryl (polyglactin), Monocryl (poliglecaprone), PDS (polydioxanone), Catgut • Non-Absorbable Sutures: Remain in the body unless removed.• Examples: Silk, Nylon, Prolene (polypropylene), Polyester 🧵 Based on Structure • Monofilament: Single smooth st...
Beautiful Nursing™️ on Instagram: "💦 Fluid and Electrolytes Hacks 💦 👉Fluid & Electrolytes was one of the hardest topics for me to learn in Nursing School. I spent HOURS and weeks studying only to find these hacks after I graduated: 🫀Potassium (3.5-5): contracts heart + muscles 🔥Hack: symptoms are SAME as prefix except for HR/urine output. 🦴Calcium (9-11): builds strong bones + teeth 🔥Hack: symptoms are OPPOSITE of prefix. 💪Magnesium (1.5-2.5): relaxes muscles 🧘♀️ 🔥Hack: symptoms are O
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