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RN101 Question Bank
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Kidney Diseases, Hemodialysis, and Peritoneal Dialysis (33 Questions)
1. You are caring for Mr. René Lafleur, a 69-year-old patient with chronic kidney disease (CKD) who receives hemodialysis three times per week. Today, during your assessment, he reports:
“I’ve been feeling more short of breath than usual, especially when lying down. My ankles seem more swollen too.”
You note bilateral pedal edema, crackles at the lung bases, and his weight is 2.4 kg higher than it was after his last dialysis session.
Question:
Based on this assessment, what do you suspect?
*
Acute kidney failure
Hyperkalemia
Fluid overload
2. You are discharging Mr. Michel Fortin, a 62-year-old client newly started on continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD). His wife expresses concern about doing the procedure at home and asks what signs they should watch for to know if something is wrong.
Question:
What will you teach Mr. Fortin and his wife to monitor as a sign of a complication that requires prompt medical consultation?
*
A clear pale-yellow outflow
Mild abdominal bloating after dialysis
Cloudy peritoneal dialysis effluent
A small amount of pink tinge in the first outflow after catheter insertion
3.1 Mr. Tremblay, a 65-year-old male, has been living with chronic kidney disease (CKD) and is being treated with hemodialysis via an arteriovenous fistula in his left forearm. His medical history includes hypertension (HTN), which is managed with medications. During your assessment, Mr. Tremblay reports feeling more breathless than usual. His vital signs are stable, but he mentions that his breathing difficulty has gradually increased over the past few days.
Question:
What symptom would justify an additional dialysis session?
*
Peripheral edema.
Hypotension.
Oliguria.
Dyspnea.
3.2 He is scheduled for hemodialysis this morning, and his daily dose of enalapril is due.
Question:
When should you administer the enalapril?
*
During dialysis
Just before dialysis
The day after dialysis
On return from dialysis
3.3 Mr. Tremblay, a 65-year-old client undergoing chronic hemodialysis via a left AV fistula, has just returned from his morning dialysis session. As you perform your post-dialysis assessment, you obtain the following vital signs:
*BP: 118/72 mmHg
*HR: 80 bpm, regular
*RR: 18/min
*SpO₂: 97% on room air
*Temperature: 37.8°C
Mr. Tremblay reports feeling fine and is sitting comfortably in bed, reading the newspaper.
Question:
What is your appropriate nursing action?
*
Encourage fluids
Notify the physician
Continue to monitor vital signs
Monitor the site of the shunt for infection
3.4 He is now ready to order breakfast. You are reviewing his diet options with him.
His prescribed renal diet is low in potassium, phosphorus, and sodium, with moderate protein and fluid restriction.
His most recent labs show:
*K⁺: 5.2 mmol/L (high-normal)
*Phosphorus: Elevated
*Creatinine and BUN: Consistent with CKD
He mentions he's feeling better after dialysis and is ready to eat.
Question:
Which of the following diet choices is best for this patient?
*
Scrambled eggs, English muffin, and apple juice
Cheese sandwich, tomato soup, and cranberry juice
Split-pea soup, whole-wheat toast, and nonfat milk
Oatmeal with cream, half a banana, and herbal tea
4.1 Mr. Sylvain Gagnon, a 63-year-old client with end-stage renal disease, is undergoing continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) at home. He arrives at the outpatient dialysis clinic for his regular assessment.
During your evaluation, he shows you the most recent dialysate drainage bag, which appears cloudy, although he has no fever or abdominal pain at the moment.
Question:
Which of the following is the best initial nursing action?
*
Send the peritoneal fluid to the laboratory for culture
Administer antibiotics
Do nothing, this is expected
Stop drainage of fluid
5.1 Mr. Michel Fortin, a 67-year-old client with chronic renal failure, receives hemodialysis treatments three times per week through an arteriovenous (AV) fistula in his left arm. You are preparing to complete your initial assessment during your shift.
Question:
Which intervention should you include?
*
Assess the AV fistula for a bruit and thrill.
Keep the AV fistula site dry.
Take the client's blood pressure in the left arm.
Keep the AV fistula wrapped in gauze.
5.2 As he prepares for discharge, you are providing him with teaching on how to protect the AV graft and avoid complications such as clotting or damage to the site.
Question:
Which action(s) will you include in your teaching to Mr. Fortin to avoid? Choose TWO (2) answers
*
Carrying heavy items including purses or luggage with the left arm
Keeping the arm elevated on a pillow when sitting
Wearing loose-fitting clothing over the graft site
Sleeping with the left arm under the head or body
6. Mr. Gagnon, 73, has stage 4 chronic kidney disease (CKD) secondary to long-standing diabetes and hypertension. He presents to the clinic with increasing fatigue and shortness of breath over 5 days. He reports sleeping on 3 pillows and waking at night “gasping.” His daughter notes his shoes no longer fit by evening. Vitals: BP 168/94, HR 96, RR 24, SpO₂ 92% on room air. On assessment, you hear bilateral crackles at the bases and note 2+ pitting edema to mid-shin.
Question: Which finding requires the most immediate intervention?
*
Fatigue and decreased appetite over several weeks
BP 168/94 with known history of hypertension
SpO₂ 92% on room air with crackles and orthopnea
Mild pruritus reported at night
7. Ms. Roberts, 61, receives hemodialysis Mon/Wed/Fri. Today she arrives for dialysis and reports dizziness when standing. Her pre-dialysis vitals: BP 96/58, HR 88. Her medication list includes amlodipine and metoprolol taken every morning. She states she took both medications one hour ago because “I never skip my pills.” The dialysis nurse is preparing to initiate treatment.
Question:
What is the most appropriate nursing action?
*
Proceed with dialysis as planned; antihypertensives should never be held
Administer an additional antihypertensive because BP control prevents complications
Notify the dialysis physician and anticipate holding pre-dialysis antihypertensives to reduce intradialytic hypotension risk
Encourage the patient to drink a large glass of water immediately before dialysis
8. Mr. Chen, 54, has a new left forearm AV fistula created 6 weeks ago. He is admitted for pneumonia. During morning rounds, a nurse prepares to take his blood pressure and notices the cuff is closest to the left arm. The patient says, “Use whichever arm is easiest.”
Question:
What is the best action?
*
Use the left arm because it has stronger pulses
Use the left arm but inflate the cuff gently
Apply a warm compress over the fistula to improve blood flow before BP
Avoid BP, venipuncture, and IV access in the fistula arm; use the other arm
9. Ms. Alvarez, 49, arrives for scheduled hemodialysis. She has a right upper arm AV fistula. On assessment, you cannot palpate a thrill and cannot hear a bruit. The patient states, “It felt fine last night.”
Question:
What is the priority nursing action?
*
Apply firm pressure over the fistula for 10 minutes to “reopen it”
Hold cannulation for possible thrombosis
Attempt cannulation using a larger needle
Reassure the patient this is normal after the fistula matures
10. Mr. Ibrahim, 67, is new to hemodialysis for end-stage kidney disease (ESKD). Midway through his first treatment, he develops headache, nausea, restlessness, and mild confusion. Vitals are stable. The machine settings show a relatively rapid fluid and solute removal.
Question:
What complication do these findings most suggest?
*
Air embolism
Dialysis disequilibrium syndrome
Hypoglycemia from insulin overdose
Pulmonary embolism
11.1 Ms. Dubois, 58, performs peritoneal dialysis (PD) at home. She presents to the ED with abdominal discomfort and low-grade fever. She brings her drained dialysate bag, which appears cloudy. She reports the catheter exit site looks “a bit red.”
Question:
What is the most likely concern?
*
Catheter migration
Constipation causing slow drainage
Peritonitis
Expected appearance after a high-protein meal
11.2 The physician asks the nurse to initiate the peritonitis protocol.
Question: What is the best initial nursing action?
*
Discard the dialysate bag because it is contaminated
Flush the catheter vigorously with tap water
Clamp the catheter and stop all PD exchanges for 48 hours
Collect a sample of the cloudy effluent using sterile technique for culture
12. Mr. Taylor, 62, on Peritoneal Dialysis reports his drain is “barely flowing” during an exchange. He denies fever, severe pain, or shortness of breath. The catheter exit site is clean/dry. He says he has been constipated for 3 days.
Question:
What is the best first intervention?
*
Clamp the catheter and end the exchange
Start broad-spectrum IV antibiotics immediately
Reposition the patient (turn side-to-side, sit up) and assess for constipation
Increase dialysate concentration
13. Mr. Nguyen, 70, with ESKD missed his last dialysis session. He presents with weakness. Labs: K⁺ 6.8 mmol/L (3.5–5.0 mmol/L). ECG shows peaked T waves. Vitals: BP 148/86, HR 58.
Question:
What is the priority nursing action?
*
Encourage high-potassium foods to prevent muscle cramps
Place on cardiac monitor and notify the physician
Administer potassium supplement as ordered PRN
Delay intervention until repeat potassium confirms result tomorrow
14. Ms. Wallace, 63, has CKD stage 5 and reports itching and “bone aching.” Labs show elevated phosphate. She says she drinks cola daily and eats processed foods because they are easy.
Question:
Which teaching is most appropriate?
*
Increase cola intake for hydration
Increase dairy intake to replace calcium
Limit high-phosphorus foods (e.g., colas, processed foods)
Add salt substitutes for flavor
15. A patient prescribed calcium carbonate (phosphate binder) says: “I take it at bedtime so I don’t forget.”
Question:
What instruction is best?
*
Take it only on dialysis days
Take it 2 hours after meals
Take it with meals/snacks
Crush and dissolve in a full glass of orange juice
16. Mr. Patel, 59, with CKD reports fatigue and decreased exercise tolerance. Labs show low hemoglobin with low reticulocyte response. The physician discusses treatment.
Question:
Which therapy is most commonly used for CKD-related anemia?
*
High-dose aspirin daily
Epoetin with iron supplementation as needed
Routine phlebotomy to stimulate RBC production
Potassium supplements
17. Ms. Kaur, 72, with advanced CKD reports nausea, metallic taste, severe pruritus, and increasing confusion. Family notes she is “not herself.” Vitals are stable.
Question:
What is the priority action?
*
Provide reassurance; these are expected and require no follow-up
Encourage high-protein diet to improve energy immediately
Give ibuprofen for discomfort
Assess for uremic complications; patient may require urgent dialysis evaluation
18. A patient with CKD stage 3 asks what to take for chronic knee pain. He reports taking ibuprofen daily.
Question:
Best nursing teaching?
*
Continue ibuprofen; it protects kidney blood flow
Avoid NSAIDs when possible in CKD
Double ibuprofen dose on dialysis days
Add a salt substitute to reduce inflammation
19. Mr. Martin, 68, with CKD stage 3 is scheduled for a contrast-enhanced CT. He is mildly dehydrated from gastroenteritis. Creatinine is above baseline.
Question:
Which intervention best reduces the risk of contrast-associated kidney injury?
*
Restrict fluids strictly before the scan
Give a high-protein meal immediately before imaging
Ensure appropriate hydration and review nephrotoxic meds
Administer potassium chloride pre-procedure
20. Ms. Simoneau, 77, is admitted from a long-term care facility with vomiting and poor oral intake for 3 days. She is lethargic and thirsty. Vitals: BP 92/54, HR 112. Labs show rising creatinine and BUN.
Question: The most likely type/cause of AKI is:
*
Intrarenal AKI from glomerulonephritis
Postrenal AKI from kidney stones
Prerenal AKI from hypovolemia
Congenital polycystic kidney disease
21. Mr. O’Connor, 75, presents with lower abdominal discomfort and minimal urine output since yesterday. He has BPH. Palpation reveals suprapubic fullness.
Question: What is the priority nursing action?
*
Encourage potassium-rich fluids
Bladder scan for urinary retention
Restrict fluids completely
Administer diuretic immediately
22. Ms. Lee, 64, just returned from hemodialysis. The dressing over her AV fistula site becomes saturated with blood while she is in bed. She looks anxious but is alert.
Question:
What is the priority intervention?
*
Remove the dressing to “air it out”
Apply a tourniquet above the fistula
Apply direct pressure to the bleeding site
Elevate the arm and wait 15 minutes
23. Mr. Hernandez, 45, is discharged after kidney transplant. He is prescribed tacrolimus and mycophenolate. He asks whether he can attend a crowded indoor family event this weekend. He feels well and wants to “celebrate properly.”
Question:
What teaching is most appropriate?
*
“You are cured; immunosuppression does not increase infection risk.”
“Stop your immunosuppressants for a few days so you can attend safely.”
Avoid sick contacts/crowds early post-transplant, practice meticulous hand hygiene, and report fever promptly.
“If you feel feverish, take leftover antibiotics at home.”
24.1 Mr. Hamidi, 63, is receiving intermittent hemodialysis via a central venous catheter. Thirty minutes into treatment, he suddenly becomes anxious and says, “I can’t breathe.” He develops a persistent cough and reports sharp chest pain. You note acute dyspnea, tachypnea, and a drop in SpO₂ from 97% to 88% on room air. The venous line tubing appears to have visible air and the machine alarm indicates possible air in the circuit. His BP is trending down and he looks pale.
Question:
What do you suspect is happening?
*
Dialysis disequilibrium syndrome
Acute pulmonary edema from fluid overload
Myocardial infarction
Air embolism
24.2 Same patient as above. The patient is worsening and the dialysis machine continues to alarm.
Question: What is your initial nursing intervention?
*
Slow the ultrafiltration rate and reassess in 10 minutes
Administer a PRN bronchodilator for suspected bronchospasm
Stop dialysis immediately, clamp the lines, place the patient in left lateral Trendelenburg position
Remove the dialysis catheter dressing to check for kinks
25.1 Ms. Fournier, 71, with ESKD on hemodialysis via a tunneled catheter, presents to the dialysis unit appearing unwell. She reports chills since last night and feels “very weak.” On assessment, she is drowsy but arousable. Vitals: T 39.1°C, HR 118, RR 26, BP 88/54 (normally 140s/80s), SpO₂ 94% RA. Her catheter exit site looks mildly erythematous and tender. She is cool and clammy with delayed capillary refill.
Question: What do you suspect is happening?
*
Intradialytic hypotension from excess ultrafiltration
Dialysis disequilibrium syndrome
Sepsis
Hypoglycemia from missed meals
25.2 Question: What is your initial nursing intervention?
*
Start dialysis immediately to remove “toxins causing fever”
Give acetaminophen and reassess in 1 hour
Notify the physician immediately
Encourage oral fluids aggressively to raise blood pressure