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  1. Home
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REx-PN

20 articles tagged with this topic.

  • Neurologic2026-05-10

    Seizure Disorders: Treatment Themes and Nursing Care

    Seizure nursing care prioritizes safety, airway protection, timing, trigger assessment, medication adherence, and urgent escalation for prolonged events.

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  • Neurologic2026-05-10

    Increased Intracranial Pressure: Nursing Priorities and Monitoring

    Increased ICP is a neuro emergency pattern where subtle mental status changes can progress to herniation without timely recognition.

    Read article
  • Neurologic2026-05-10

    Stroke: Ischemic vs Hemorrhagic Nursing Care and Exam Priorities

    Stroke nursing questions reward rapid recognition, last-known-well timing, airway and glucose checks, CT differentiation, and complication prevention.

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  • Cardiovascular2026-05-10

    Deep Vein Thrombosis (DVT): Nursing Assessment, Prevention, and Care

    DVT nursing care centers on risk recognition, limb assessment, PE prevention, anticoagulation safety, and patient teaching.

    Read article
  • Cardiovascular2026-05-10

    Pulmonary Embolism: Signs, Symptoms, and Nursing Priorities

    Pulmonary embolism is a sudden ventilation-perfusion and right-heart strain emergency where recognition and escalation matter quickly.

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  • Respiratory2026-05-10

    Asthma Pathophysiology and Emergency Nursing Interventions

    Asthma emergencies combine bronchoconstriction, airway inflammation, mucus, and fatigue risk, so nursing priorities focus on rapid respiratory assessment and treatment response.

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  • Respiratory2026-05-10

    COPD: Symptoms, Treatment Themes, and Nursing Care for Exams

    COPD nursing care blends chronic symptom management with acute exacerbation recognition, oxygen safety, inhaler technique, and energy conservation.

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  • Acid-Base Balance2026-05-10

    Respiratory Acidosis vs Respiratory Alkalosis: ABG Patterns for Nurses

    Respiratory acid-base disorders start with ventilation: retained CO2 causes acidosis, excessive CO2 loss causes alkalosis.

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  • Acid-Base Balance2026-05-10

    Metabolic Acidosis vs Metabolic Alkalosis: Nursing Pathophysiology Review

    Use bicarbonate direction, cause patterns, compensation, and patient safety cues to distinguish metabolic acidosis from metabolic alkalosis.

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  • Fluid and Electrolytes2026-05-10

    Hypocalcemia vs Hypercalcemia: NCLEX Guide for Nursing Students

    Calcium disorders are neuromuscular and cardiac safety questions: low calcium increases excitability, high calcium slows and weakens.

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  • Fluid and Electrolytes2026-05-10

    Hypernatremia: Causes, Symptoms, and Nursing Care for Clinical Exams

    Hypernatremia usually signals water deficit relative to sodium, making thirst access, neurologic status, and careful fluid correction essential.

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  • Fluid and Electrolytes2026-05-10

    Hyponatremia: Symptoms, Causes, and Nursing Priorities for NCLEX

    Hyponatremia is a water-sodium balance problem where neurologic assessment, cause recognition, and safe correction matter more than memorizing one number.

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  • Pharmacology2026-05-10

    Beta Blockers: Mechanism, Side Effects, and Nursing Teaching Points for Exams

    Understand beta blockers as sympathetic brake medications that affect heart rate, blood pressure, conduction, bronchospasm risk, and symptom masking.

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  • Pharmacology2026-05-10

    Warfarin vs Heparin for Nursing Students: Routes, Monitoring, Reversal, and Exam Traps

    Separate warfarin from heparin by mechanism, monitoring, onset, reversal, patient teaching, and safety priorities for anticoagulation questions.

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  • Pharmacology2026-05-10

    Digoxin Toxicity: Nursing Priorities, Risk Factors, and Exam Recognition

    Connect digoxin's narrow therapeutic index with GI symptoms, visual changes, dysrhythmias, potassium shifts, renal function, and safe escalation.

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  • Emergency and Critical Care2026-05-10

    Sepsis Pathophysiology and Early Nursing Recognition

    Recognize sepsis as dysregulated infection response with organ dysfunction, perfusion failure risk, and time-sensitive nursing escalation.

    Read article
  • Cardiovascular2026-05-10

    Left-Sided vs Right-Sided Heart Failure: Symptoms and Nursing Care

    Use forward flow and congestion patterns to distinguish left-sided and right-sided heart failure in nursing exams and bedside assessment.

    Read article
  • Renal and Urinary2026-05-10

    Acute Kidney Injury Explained: Prerenal vs Intrinsic vs Postrenal

    Use perfusion, nephron injury, and obstruction to organize acute kidney injury assessment, lab trends, urine findings, and safe nursing priorities.

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  • Endocrine Disorders2026-05-10

    DKA vs HHS Explained: Nursing Priorities, Labs, and NCLEX Differences

    Separate DKA from HHS by insulin deficit, ketones, acidosis, osmolality, dehydration severity, and the nursing actions that protect patients during treatment.

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  • Endocrine Disorders2026-05-10

    SIADH vs Diabetes Insipidus Explained for Nursing Students

    Compare SIADH and diabetes insipidus as opposite water-balance disorders so sodium, urine output, neurologic risk, and priority nursing actions make sense.

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