Cognitive & Somatic Disorders
Q: What higher-level brain functions are encompassed by cognition? A: Cognition relies on the brain's ability to process, retain, and use information, encompassing reasoning, judgment, attention, comprehension, and memory.
Q: How is a cognitive disorder defined? A: A cognitive disorder is defined by a disruption in higher-level brain functions.
Q: What are the three primary pathophysiological markers of Alzheimer's disease? A: Brain atrophy, the accumulation of amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles in neuronal synapses, and an acetylcholine (ACh) deficit.
Q: What causes Vascular dementia? A: Vascular lesions that cause multiple abrupt infarcts.
Q: Which neurobiological etiology affects personality and social skills due to frontotemporal lobar degeneration?A: Pick's disease.
Q: At what stage of life does Huntington's disease typically manifest, and what are its key features? A: It typically manifests in early adulthood (patients in their 30s to 40s) and is marked by cerebral atrophy and choreiform movements driven by an inherited dominant gene.
Q: What condition demonstrates the mind-body connection in pediatric populations, accounting for up to one-fifth of pediatric neurology clinic visits? A: Functional Neurologic Symptom Disorder (FND).
Q: What are the defining characteristics of delirium? A: It is a syndrome characterized by a disturbance of consciousness and cognition, difficulty paying attention, easy distractibility, disorientation, and sensory disturbances such as visual or tactile hallucinations and illusions.
Q: What are the primary physiological triggers and risk factors for delirium? A: Older age, baseline cognitive impairment, polypharmacy, and severe physical illnesses including hypoxia, systemic infections (sepsis, positive urine cultures, fevers >100.3°F), low sodium, low blood glucose, and opioid pain medications.
Q: What are aphasia, apraxia, and agnosia in the context of dementia? A: Aphasia is the deterioration of language, apraxia is the impaired ability to execute motor functions, and agnosia is the inability to recognize objects.
Q: What are the known risk factors for developing dementia? A: Elevated plasma homocysteine levels, genetic components (like the APOE gene or Huntington's dominant gene), and cardiovascular risks.
Q: Are the symptoms of somatic symptom illnesses under the client's conscious control? A: No, these symptoms—which suggest a major medical condition without a demonstrable organic basis—are not under the client's conscious control.
Q: What are the primary risk factors for developing somatic symptom illnesses? A: Internalization of stress, alexithymia (an inability to identify emotions), childhood sexual abuse, and being female.
Q: How do the onset and duration of delirium compare to those of dementia? A: Delirium has a rapid onset with a brief duration (hours to days) and a fluctuating level of consciousness, while dementia has a gradual and insidious onset with progressive deterioration.
Q: How do memory and thought processes differ between delirium and dementia? A: Delirium primarily impairs short-term memory with temporarily disorganized thought processes, whereas dementia progresses from short-term to long-term memory destruction.
Q: What is the pharmacological approach to treating severe psychomotor agitation in delirium? A: Judicious use of antipsychotics like haloperidol in small doses (0.5 to 1 mg), while benzodiazepines like lorazepam are strictly reserved for alcohol withdrawal-induced delirium.
Q: Which medication classes are used to manage the progressive symptoms of dementia? A: Cholinesterase inhibitors (such as donepezil, rivastigmine, and galantamine) or NMDA receptor antagonists (like memantine).
Q: What are the typical demographic characteristics of caregivers for clients with dementia? A: Most caregivers are women, often adult daughters, and many are over the age of 65 themselves, frequently experiencing severe caregiver role strain and exhaustion.
Q: What community-based referrals should a psychiatric nurse initiate to support caregivers? A: Referrals to home health agencies, adult day care centers, residential facilities, and respite care to provide physical and emotional relief, as well as support groups to help manage feelings of grief and loss.
Q: What distinguishes somatic symptom illnesses from malingering? A: In somatic symptom illnesses, the client subconsciously transforms mental experiences into real bodily symptoms that they truly experience and cannot control; malingering is the intentional production or gross exaggeration of false symptoms driven strictly by an external incentive like avoiding work or obtaining compensation.
Q: What is the primary motivation in factitious disorders? A: The intentional production or feigning of symptoms purely to gain emotional attention and assume the "sick role".
Q: What is the most important first step when planning care for a client presenting with a cognitive disorder? A: Assess the client first to identify any reversible physiological causes of delirium.
Q: How should a nurse intervene when a client with end-stage dementia becomes agitated? A: Do not present reality or rationalize; instead, acknowledge their feelings and redirect with new activities.
Q: What psychotherapeutic interventions are utilized in the care plan for somatic disorders? A: Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT), including cognitive reframing (restating negative thoughts in positive ways) and systematic desensitization.
Q: What emotion-focused coping strategies should be taught to clients with somatic disorders? A: Deep breathing, guided imagery (concentrating on mental images to reduce stress), and biofeedback.
Q: Why should nurses limit the time spent discussing physical complaints and avoid prescribing narcotic analgesics for somatic clients? A: To prevent dependence and shift focus toward group therapy, which reduces isolation and builds social skills.
Q: What dietary components can help lower elevated plasma homocysteine levels to minimize the risk of dementia? A: Folate, betaine, and vitamin B12.
Q: What is "cyberchondria," and how should it be managed through education? A: Cyberchondria is health-related anxiety fueled by internet searches; it should be managed by educating clients on its dangers and promoting primary care follow-ups with a single trusted provider to avoid unnecessary testing.
Q: Why is self-reflection crucial for healthcare professionals caring for clients with somatic symptom illnesses? A: Professionals often become frustrated or dismissive when diagnostic tests repeatedly come back negative, so nurses must evaluate their biases and remember the client's pain and distress are completely authentic and involuntary.
Q: How does cultural humility apply to assessing clients for cognitive impairment? A: Nurses must recognize that cultural backgrounds deeply influence memory testing and orientation; for example, failing to answer a question about a birthday should not be mistaken for cognitive impairment if the client belongs to a culture that does not track or celebrate birthdays.