More questions on this topic

More questions on this topic ( 29 Questions)

Question 1 :

A nurse is preparing to gavage feed a preterm infant who is receiving IV antibiotics.

The infant expels a bloody stool.

What nursing action should the nurse implement?



Correct Answer: B

Institute contact precautions. This is because the infant may have necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), which is the most common cause of bloody stool in preterm infants.

NEC is a serious condition that involves inflammation and necrosis of the intestinal wall and can lead to perforation, sepsis, and death. NEC is also a potential source of infection for other infants in the NICU, so contact precautions are necessary to prevent cross-contamination.

Choice A is wrong because obtaining a rectal temperature is not indicated for an infant with bloody stool. Rectal temperature can cause irritation and bleeding of the rectal mucosa and can also increase the risk of perforation if there is intestinal necrosis.

Choice C is wrong because decreasing the amount of the feeding is not enough to manage an infant with bloody stool.

The infant may need to have the feeding stopped completely and receive parenteral nutrition until the bowel heals. Decreasing the feeding may also compromise the infant’s growth and development.

Choice D is wrong because assessing for abdominal distention is not a nursing action but a nursing assessment.

Abdominal distention is a common sign of feeding intolerance and NEC, but it is not specific or sensitive enough to diagnose the condition. Other signs and symptoms of NEC include bile-stained or bloody gastric residuals, emesis, diarrhea, temperature instability, apnea, bradycardia, hypotension, and lethargy.


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