A) Hands and Neck. B) Coccyx and Neck. C) Sacrum and Coccyx. D) Back of The Head and Hands
A) Hands and Neck. B) Coccyx and Neck. C) Sacrum and Coccyx. D) Back of The Head and Hands
A) Hands and Neck. B) Coccyx and Neck. C) Sacrum and Coccyx. D) Back of The Head and Hands
1. The most common areas where pressure ulcers occur are the
a) hands and neck.
b) coccyx and neck.
c) sacrum and coccyx.
d) back of the head and hands.
4. In which of the following pressure injury stages is the skin still intact?
a) Stage 1
b) Stage 2
c) Stage 4
d) Unstageable
5. In which of the following pressure injury stages is there full-thickness skin
and tissue loss and the base of the ulcer is covered by slough, obscuring
the wound bed?
a) Stage 1
b) Stage 3
c) Stage 4
d) Unstageable
11. For patients in long-term care or home care, the Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality recommends what method(s) of debridement?
a) Surgical
b) Maggot therapy
c) Autolytic and enzymatic
d) Debridement is not recommended.
12. Direct contact electrical stimulation therapy should be considered for the
management of
a) unstageable ulcers.
b) deep tissue injuries.
c) recalcitrant stage 1 ulcers.
d) stage 3 and stage 4 ulcers
14. The Pressure Ulcer Scale for Healing (PUSH) tool assesses what three
domains of the pressure ulcer to determine wound progression?
a) Size, odor, and color
b) Comorbidities, pain, and tissue in wound bed
c) Size, exudate amount, and tissue in wound bed
d) Wound location, signs of infection, and exudates
17. addition of blister-like lesions; skin may be broken occurs in which stage
of pressure ulcers:
a) Stage 1
b) Stage 2
c) Stage 3
d) Unstageable