Clinical meaning
Advanced pathophysiology forms the foundation of nurse practitioner clinical reasoning, requiring integration of cellular and molecular mechanisms with clinical presentation and diagnostic findings. Cellular injury occurs through multiple mechanisms: hypoxia (ischemic, hypoxemic, histotoxic), free radical damage (reactive oxygen species overwhelming antioxidant defenses), chemical injury (direct toxicity or metabolic conversion to reactive intermediates), infectious agents (direct cytopathic effect, immune-mediated injury), and immunological reactions (types I-IV hypersensitivity). The inflammatory response involves vascular changes (vasodilation, increased permeability), cellular events (leukocyte margination, emigration, chemotaxis, phagocytosis), and chemical mediators (histamine, prostaglandins, leukotrienes, cytokines, complement). Understanding these mechanisms enables the clinician to differentiate between conditions with overlapping presentations and prescribe targeted pharmacotherapy based on pathophysiological rationale.
Diagnosis & workup
Diagnostics & workup: - Comprehensive history and physical examination (H&P) - Interpret complete blood count with differential - Interpret comprehensive metabolic panel (electrolytes, renal function, liver function, glucose) - Interpret arterial blood gas results - Order and interpret imaging studies (chest X-ray, CT, MRI, ultrasound) - Order and interpret electrocardiograms (12-lead ECG) - Order and interpret urinalysis and urine culture