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Case Study — NCLEX Success

Sepsis NGN Case Study

A Next Gen NCLEX-style unfolding case. Read each step, commit to your own answer — out loud or on paper — and only then reveal ours. The six steps mirror the NCSBN Clinical Judgment Measurement Model exactly as the exam tests it.

15 min activity · NCLEX Success

Educational use only. This case is a learning exercise with simplified values, not a treatment protocol — real sepsis care follows provider orders and your facility’s sepsis bundle. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

The Scenario

0700 handoff: Mrs. Ramos, 72, is post-op day 2 after an open colon resection. History: type 2 diabetes, hypertension. Night shift reports she “slept poorly and seemed a little confused around 0500, probably just hospital delirium.” She has a urinary catheter (day 3), a midline abdominal incision, and is receiving D5½NS at 75 mL/hr.

0730 Assessment

  • Temp 38.4°C (101.1°F) · HR 112 · RR 24 · BP 102/58 (baseline 140s/80s) · SpO₂ 94% RA
  • Drowsy but rousable; oriented ×2 (person, place) — baseline ×4 per family
  • Incision: mildly red at edges, scant serosanguineous drainage
  • Urine: 25 mL over the past hour, dark and cloudy in the bag
  • Skin warm and flushed; capillary refill 3 seconds
  • Blood glucose 218 mg/dL · morning labs pending

Step 1 — Recognize Cues

Which findings are most relevant — and which matter most right now? List the cues you would flag before revealing.

Reveal answer

Most concerning cues: new confusion (oriented ×2 from ×4 — altered mentation in an older adult is often the first sepsis sign), fever 38.4°C, HR 112, RR 24, BP 102/58 against a hypertensive baseline, urine output 25 mL/hr and cloudy with a day-3 catheter, glucose 218 in a known diabetic (stress response), warm flushed skin.

Relevant but less urgent: incision redness with scant drainage (a possible source, not yet alarming alone).

The trap: accepting “probably just hospital delirium” at face value. New confusion plus abnormal vitals is sepsis until proven otherwise — especially in older adults, who may never spike a high fever.

Step 2 — Analyze Cues

What conditions could explain this picture? Connect the cues to at least three possibilities and decide which the evidence supports.

Reveal answer

Sepsis (most supported): infection source candidates (catheter day 3 — CAUTI; surgical site; pneumonia risk post-op) + systemic response (fever, tachycardia, tachypnea, relative hypotension, altered mentation, falling urine output). She meets SIRS-style criteria and has organ-dysfunction signals (mentation, urine output, BP trend).

Hypovolemia alone: could explain tachycardia, low urine output, and soft BP — but not fever, cloudy urine, or confusion as cleanly.

Hyperglycemic crisis: glucose 218 is stress-level, nowhere near HHS territory; doesn’t explain fever.

Simple delirium: explains confusion only — and delirium in a post-op elder demands a cause anyway. Infection is the most common one.

Step 3 — Prioritize Hypotheses

Rank your hypotheses. Which one drives your next actions, and why?

Reveal answer

1. Sepsis, likely urinary or surgical source — highest probability and highest consequence. Sepsis mortality climbs with every hour of delayed treatment, which makes it the priority even before it’s confirmed.

2. Hypovolemia — likely coexisting and addressed by the same initial actions (fluids, monitoring).

3. Delirium of other cause — kept on the list, worked up after the life threat is addressed.

NGN logic: prioritize by probability × urgency. A likely, lethal, time-sensitive condition outranks everything merely possible or merely uncomfortable.

Step 4 — Generate Solutions

What should happen in the next hour? Draft your action list — include what you anticipate the provider will order.

Reveal answer

Immediate nursing actions: notify the provider/rapid response per protocol using SBAR; full vitals with a manual BP; place on continuous monitoring; raise HOB, apply oxygen if saturation drops further per protocol; ensure patent IV access (anticipate a second line).

Anticipated orders (the sepsis bundle): blood cultures ×2 before antibiotics, lactate level, urinalysis and urine culture, CBC/CMP, broad-spectrum antibiotics within the first hour, and a 30 mL/kg crystalloid bolus for hypotension/lactate elevation per orders.

Also reasonable: strict I&O, glucose monitoring, evaluating whether the catheter can come out or be replaced (source control).

Step 5 — Take Action

Sequencing question: the provider orders blood cultures, lactate, antibiotics, and a fluid bolus. The antibiotic arrives from pharmacy first, before cultures are drawn. What do you do?

Reveal answer

Draw the cultures first, then hang the antibiotic — cultures drawn after antibiotics may be falsely negative, costing the team the organism and targeted therapy. The exception: never let culture logistics delay antibiotics beyond the bundle window — escalate immediately if cultures can’t be obtained promptly.

While infusing: start the fluid bolus per orders (watching an older heart — listen for crackles, monitor for respiratory worsening), recheck vitals per protocol, and keep the family informed about the change in plan.

Step 6 — Evaluate Outcomes

1000 reassessment: Temp 38.0°C · HR 98 · RR 20 · BP 116/68 · SpO₂ 96% on 2L · oriented ×3 · urine 40 mL this hour, clearing · lactate resulted at 2.8, repeat pending. Which findings show the interventions are working, and what still needs watching?

Reveal answer

Improving: BP and heart rate trending toward baseline, mentation clearing (×2 → ×3), urine output rising, respiratory rate settling — perfusion is recovering.

Still watching: the repeat lactate (clearance is the marker that matters), temperature curve, culture results for antibiotic targeting, fluid tolerance in a 72-year-old (crackles, oxygen needs), and glucose.

Not resolved: source control — the catheter and the incision still need a plan. Evaluation isn’t a checkbox; it loops you back to Step 1 with fresh cues.

Debrief — The Pattern to Keep

  • New confusion in an older adult = infection until proven otherwise — the earliest sepsis cue is often the brain, not the fever.
  • "Normal" BP against a hypertensive baseline is relative hypotension — always compare to the patient's own numbers.
  • Cultures before antibiotics; antibiotics within the hour — both, in that order, neither delayed for the other.
  • Prioritize by probability × urgency, then re-evaluate: the six NGN steps are a loop, not a checklist.
  • Falling urine output is an organ-perfusion alarm, not a hydration footnote.

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