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PN·Canada·
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  2. /REx-PN and NCLEX-PN practice questions
  3. /REx-PN
  4. /REx-PN lessons
  5. /Cardiac Catheterization Care
Third-Degree (Complete) Heart BlockPrevious
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Post-Angiography Nursing CareNext
PN·Canada·Cardiovascular
CardiovascularPN · LPN · RPNCanada exam scope

Cardiac Catheterization Care

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Pathophysiology

Clinical meaning

Cardiac catheterization is an invasive diagnostic and therapeutic procedure in which a flexible catheter is inserted through a peripheral artery (usually the radial or femoral artery) and advanced to the heart under fluoroscopic guidance. The procedure allows visualization of coronary arteries by injecting radiopaque contrast dye (coronary angiography), measurement of intracardiac pressures, assessment of cardiac output, evaluation of valvular function, and therapeutic interventions such as percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with balloon angioplasty and stent placement. During PCI, a balloon-tipped catheter is positioned within the stenotic coronary segment and inflated to compress the atherosclerotic plaque against the arterial wall, restoring luminal diameter. A metallic stent (bare-metal or drug-eluting) is then deployed to maintain vessel patency. Drug-eluting stents (DES) release antiproliferative agents (everolimus, zotarolimus) that inhibit neointimal hyperplasia, reducing restenosis rates from 20-30% (bare-metal stents) to 5-10%. Complications include access site bleeding or hematoma, coronary artery dissection, contrast-induced nephropathy, allergic reaction to contrast dye, stroke, myocardial infarction, and death (less than 1%). The practical nurse monitors the patient pre- and post-procedure, assesses the access site, and recognizes complications.

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REx-PN blog posts · Cardiovascular articles · Tools · All lesson hubs · REx-PN exam hub

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Third-Degree (Complete) Heart Block
Post-Angiography Nursing Care

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  1. A 60-year-old male patient with a history of hypertension and hyperlipidemia is being discharged after a myocardial infarction. The healthcare provider pr…
  2. A patient with a history of heart disease is scheduled for a stress test. The RPN should monitor which vital sign most closely during the procedure?
  3. A nurse is assessing a 60-year-old female patient who has just returned from a cardiac catheterization. She reports a sharp pain in her chest. What is the…
  4. A 48-year-old male with a history of coronary artery disease is being discharged after a myocardial infarction. Which lifestyle modification should the nu…

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Review related lessons

A 65-year-old male is undergoing cardiac rehabilitation following a myocardial infarction. Which activity should the nurse encourage?
  • A practical nurse is assessing a client with suspected deep vein thrombosis. Which finding is most consistent with DVT in the left calf?
  • A practical nurse is teaching a client about the use of nitroglycerin sublingual tablets for angina. Which instruction is correct?
  • A practical nurse is assessing a client with left-sided heart failure. Which findings are most consistent with this condition?
  • A practical nurse is preparing to administer digoxin to a client. The apical pulse is 54 bpm. What should the nurse do?
  • A client with heart failure has crackles bilaterally in the lungs and is sitting upright to breathe. The nurse recognizes these as signs of:
  • A client with peripheral arterial disease reports pain in the calves when walking that is relieved by rest. This symptom is called:
  • A client with atrial fibrillation is receiving warfarin therapy. The nurse should teach the client to:
  • A client is diagnosed with hypertension. Which lifestyle modification should the nurse recommend first?
  • A client experiencing chest pain is given sublingual nitroglycerin. The nurse should instruct the client to:
  • A client with heart failure is prescribed a low-sodium diet. The nurse should teach the client to avoid:
  • A client with a pacemaker asks about using a microwave oven. The nurse should explain:
  • A client with heart failure should be taught to recognize which signs of worsening condition?
  • A client receiving an anticoagulant injection (enoxaparin) should have the injection administered in the:
  • A client with newly diagnosed heart failure should be taught to weigh themselves:
  • A client with peripheral vascular disease should be taught to:
  • A client with deep vein thrombosis should be monitored for which complication?
  • A client taking antihypertensive medications should be taught to:
  • A client prescribed nitroglycerin should keep the medication:
  • A client with congestive heart failure gains 3 pounds overnight. The nurse should:
  • A client with aortic stenosis presents with syncope on exertion. The nurse should:
  • Practice this topic (app)Question hub · filtered
    • Atrial fibrillation: rate vs rhythm focus — REx-PN (Canada)
    • STEMI vs NSTEMI: first nursing moves — REx-PN (Canada)
    • Angina vs infarction: data that changes risk — REx-PN (Canada)
    • Pacemaker site monitoring — REx-PN (Canada)
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    Canada RPN · REx-PN

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