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Advanced Practice Nursing in the Care of Older Adults (3rd Edition, Kennedy‑Malone) – Verified Test Bank (Chapters 1–23, Complete PDF With Questions, Answers & Rationales) 2025/2026 Graded A+|Approved Pass Advanced Practice Nursing in the Care of Older Adults (3rd Edition, Kennedy‑Malone) – Verified Test Bank (Chapters 1–23, Complete PDF With Questions, Answers & Rationales) 2025/2026 Graded A+|Approved Pass
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. Mrs. Smith, 75 years old, reports that she is weak, has difficulty urinating, and is dehydrated. Although she is afebrile, the nurse conducts a thorough physical examination, including urinalysis and complete blood count (CBC). The total assessment is necessary because:
The clinician must be aware that all the systems interact and, in doing so, can increase the older person's vulnerability to illness/disease.
The nurse must not attribute symptoms only to the aging process.
There may be comorbidities accompanying this condition.
Assumptions of not reporting properly may not be true. A patient with renal disease has blood work drawn, and the results show an increase in serum creatinine. The nurse practitioner needs to know which of the following laboratory values before ordering medications?
A CBC will not evaluate kidney function for a patient with renal disease.
A culture and sensitivity test reflects the presence of an infection and the antibiotic to which the organism is sensitive.
Any risks involved in laboratory testing must be considered concerning the patient's clinical condition and weighed against the test's expected benefits.
. Janey, 25 years old, may experience arthritis differently than 65- year-old Mrs. Johnson because:
Knowledge of the bimodality of age onset of certain disease conditions will aid the advanced practice nurse in avoiding misdiagnosis or delay in diagnosis due to lack of recognition.
Symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis may be different depending on the age of the patient.
Younger patients may not experience constitutional symptoms such as fever, malaise, weight loss, and depression.
In late-onset rheumatoid arthritis, the joint involvement is more often in the larger joints. The nurse practitioner is examining an 85-year-old man with reports of abdominal pain, weakness, and loss of appetite. Which is the most likely condition to be tested for and ruled out?
Certain diseases, such as neoplasms and carcinomas, are more common in the elderly, and an understanding of the epidemiology is critical in the interpretation.
Partial seizure is more common in early old age.
Sarcopenia is more common in early old age.
Older patients with one morbidity often express difficulties in general.
Arthritis of the shoulder is accompanied by other neurological symptoms.
Older patients with arthritis often experience pain in lower extremities.
The patient may not report significant signs and symptoms - ANSWER - ANSWER : 1 Page: 5 Feedback
Older patients with late-onset rheumatoid arthritis experience joint involvement more often in the larger joints, such as the shoulder, and they also experience systemic symptoms such as fever, malaise, weight loss, and depression.
Older patients may express symptoms in any other physical systems.
Patients more often experience arthritis in smaller joints.
A thorough examination will detect objective indicators.
The nurse practitioner performs a thorough systemic examination of a patient who reports diarrhea and pain in the upper left quadrant of the abdomen. One possible diagnosis would be:
Hirschsprung's disease is an obstruction of the colon in infancy.
Diarrhea is not associated with pancreatitis.
Appendicitis is more common in younger patients than in older patients.
GIBD is manifested differently in a bimodal pattern. A 70-year-old man is seeing a nurse practitioner because he is feeling weak and dizzy. The nurse practitioner is discussing a care plan with him and makes which of the following statements? Select all that apply.
The nurse practitioner is leading a class of seniors over age 65 years and is teaching about nutritional needs. One of the men asks why, even though he eats correctly according to the standards presented, he still feels weaker than he did 10 years ago. He also wonders why he gets more infections than he used to. Which of the following are helpful ANSWER s? Select all that apply.
Improved nutrition may not be the factor affecting health of elders.
Many factors can influence the health of elders, including lifestyle and medications.
Many factors can influence the health of elders, including changes in the immune system.
Viruses and other infections are not the only considerations for infections.
Biochemical individuality is important in detecting asymptomatic abnormalities in older adults. Significant homeostatic disturbances in the same individual may be detected through serial laboratory tests, even though all individual test results may lie within normal limits of the reference interval for the entire group. An older woman is seen in the ambulatory clinic for a routine checkup. The patient asks about results of her blood work compared to last year's results. How is it best for the clinician to respond? Select all that apply.
Individuals experience smaller variations in laboratory work than from the others in the same age group.
There are wider variations of laboratory results within a group of older people.
Laboratory values are determined by more than age and gender.
Laboratory values may vary as a result of nutrition, activity, and emotional status.
The reference values presented for the older adult cohort are not necessarily correct for the individual due to biochemical individuality.
. Adam, 70 years old, is admitted for possible myasthenia gravis (MG). The nurse practitioner knows that MG is commonly seen in women between 20 and 40 years old. Adam, however, is experiencing an ocular form of MG, has dysphonia, and does not have any thymus abnormalities. Adam asks why the nurse is concerned about MG since he is older and this is a "young person's disease." Which of the following are the best ANSWER s? Select all that apply.
Ordering more tests than needed violates the principle of "Do no harm."
MG is bimodal and can be found in younger women, as well as in both men and women.
Feedback
Blood studies are more valuable when assessing for an increase or decrease in values.
It is not helpful to use aging as an explanation for possible abnormal results.
If a change in treatment is appropriate, the least expensive alternative should be sought.
Significant disturbances in the same individual may be detected through serial laboratory tests.
The clinician must determine whether a value obtained reflects a normal aging change, a disease, or the potential for disease. Mr. Adams is 90 years old. In the last few months he appears unable to comply with the health-care plan developed by the nurse practitioner. The nurse practitioner considers which of the following reasons for noncompliance when updating his home care plan? Select all that apply.
Page: 5 Feedback
As a patient ages, this correlates with more medications having been ordered.
Patients with multimorbidity are known to have a treatment burden in terms of understanding and self-care management of their conditions.
Patients with multimorbidity are known to have a treatment burden in terms of understanding and self-care management of their conditions.
This burden entails affording complex drug regimens.
Though cognitive ability may be a factor, there is much more to consider when noncompliance is an issue.