1. 110 of 150. A 50-year-old Jehovah's Witness presents with acute gastrointestinal bleeding and a blood pressure of 85/50 mmHg. They adamantly refuse all blood products. What is the indicated intervention?
Answer: A
In acute hemorrhagic shock where blood products are refused, the immediate priority is maintaining intravascular volume and perfusion using crystalloids or colloids. Options B and D blatantly violate the patient's autonomy and religious rights, which is legally and ethically prohibited in a competent adult. Option C takes days to weeks to increase red cell mass and will not resolve acute hypovolemic shock.
2. 111 of 150. A resident of a long-term care facility with a chronic indwelling urethral catheter is noted to have cloudy, foul-smelling urine in the drainage bag. The patient is afebrile and denies flank pain or confusion. What is the most appropriate management?
Answer: C
Patients with a chronic indwelling urethral catheter frequently develop bacterial colonization, which often presents with cloudy, foul-smelling urine. However, current guidelines strongly advise against treating these findings with antibiotics if the patient is afebrile and denies flank pain or other systemic symptoms. Reassurance and maintaining routine catheter care (Option C) is the most appropriate management for asymptomatic bacteriuria in this population to prevent antimicrobial resistance. Option A is incorrect because empiric antibiotics are only indicated when systemic signs of infection are present. Option B is unnecessary and wasteful without systemic symptoms warranting a true culture. Option D is contraindicated; routine bladder irrigation is not recommended for preventing or treating catheter-associated infections and may introduce new pathogens.
3. 112 of 150. A 50-year-old male presents with a moderate asthma exacerbation. During the history, he reports using two albuterol canisters monthly and mentions a previous intubation for asthma three years ago. Which intervention is the highest priority?
Answer: C
This patient possesses major risk factors for a fatal asthma exacerbation, specifically a previous intubation and excessive use of short-acting beta-agonists (more than one canister per month). Even if the current presentation appears moderate, these high-risk features mandate aggressive and early intervention with systemic oral corticosteroids and close observation to prevent rapid deterioration. Simply adding an inhaled corticosteroid, a muscarinic antagonist, or a leukotriene modifier is insufficient for managing an acute exacerbation in a patient with a demonstrated history of life-threatening airway compromise.
4. 114 of 150. The FNP is preparing to administer the Timed Up and Go test to an 80-year-old female with diabetic neuropathy. The patient asks how fast she should walk during the assessment.
Answer: D
The standardized instructions for the TUG test require the patient to walk at their normal, comfortable pace. This provides an accurate assessment of their typical daily mobility and fall risk, making Option D correct. Option A is incorrect because asking the patient to rush alters their natural gait mechanics and artificially inflates risk. Option B describes tandem walking, which is part of a separate neurological exam, not the TUG test. Option C is incorrect because instructing the patient to walk slower than usual will yield an artificially prolonged time, leading to an inaccurate fall risk stratification.
5. 115 of 150. 58-year-old female with HFrEF demonstrates a steady 1-pound daily weight increase over five days alongside newly requiring three pillows to sleep.
Answer: B
The log reveals a cumulative five-pound weight gain alongside worsening orthopnea, which clearly signals acute decompensated heart failure. The standard guideline-directed response in the outpatient setting is to increase the loop diuretic to manage the active fluid overload. Decreasing evening fluid intake is a helpful maintenance strategy but is completely insufficient for active volume overload causing respiratory distress. Scheduling an outpatient cardiology consultation merely delays the necessary immediate intervention for impending pulmonary edema. Initiating a transition to an ARNI is inappropriate during an acute decompensation phase; you should only attempt major guideline-directed medical therapy optimization after the patient achieves euvolemia and returns to clinical stability.
6. 116 of 150. A 35-year-old female recently started taking oral ferrous sulfate for severe iron deficiency anemia caused by heavy menstrual bleeding. When should the nurse practitioner schedule a follow-up laboratory draw to check the reticulocyte count and confirm an early therapeutic response?
Answer: C
The reticulocyte count peaks at approximately seven to ten days following the initiation of iron replacement therapy. This provides the earliest objective evidence that the bone marrow is responding to the iron and producing new red blood cells. Checking at one to two days is too early to observe a change. Waiting three to four weeks or six to eight weeks is appropriate for monitoring hemoglobin and hematocrit recovery, but misses the peak reticulocytosis window.
7. 117 of 150. While reading a meta-analysis on a novel migraine therapy, the nurse practitioner notes the authors combined randomized controlled trials and retrospective chart reviews to calculate the overall effect size without conducting a subgroup analysis. How does this methodological approach impact the review?
Answer: B
Combining high-quality randomized controlled trials with lower-quality observational studies, like retrospective chart reviews, without separating them introduces a significant risk of bias. The practitioner should recognize that this methodological flaw weakens the reliability of the meta-analysis conclusions. Option A is incorrect because mixing study designs without proper subgrouping compromises internal validity rather than strengthening external validity. Option C is incorrect because diverse study designs actually increase heterogeneity, making formal assessment even more critical. Option D is incorrect because the absence of subgroup analysis obscures potential differences in efficacy and safety across the different study types.
8. 118 of 150. A 55-year-old male requests a PSA test. He believes a normal result guarantees he is cancer-free and an abnormal result means he needs immediate surgery.
Answer: A
Effective shared decision-making requires correcting misconceptions before testing. The patient misunderstands the predictive value of the test and the diagnostic pathway. Option A addresses this by explaining false positives and the potential need for a prostate biopsy. Option B skips essential pre-test counseling, which violates shared decision-making principles. Option C is factually incorrect, as watchful waiting is not the only option available. Option D is an extreme and inappropriate response to a simple knowledge deficit.
9. 119 of 150. A seven-year-old presents with a spiral fracture of the humerus. The family nurse practitioner suspects non-accidental trauma. During the assessment, the parent exhibits escalating aggressive behavior toward the clinical staff. How should the provider proceed?
Answer: B
The best approach is to file the report discreetly. While it is often ideal to maintain transparency with families, informing a caregiver is contraindicated if it increases the risk of harm to the child or staff. Option B is correct because the provider must prioritize safety and mandatory reporting. Option A is incorrect because notifying an aggressive parent could trigger flight or further violence. Option C is incorrect as confronting the parent is outside the APRN scope and escalates danger. Option D is incorrect because detaining a parent is a law enforcement function, not a clinical role, though security can help maintain clinic safety.
10. 120 of 150. A 24-year-old female presents with a sudden onset of severe, sharp right lower quadrant pain associated with nausea and vomiting. Her last menstrual period was two weeks ago. She is afebrile and has a negative pregnancy test in the clinic. What is the best imaging modality to order next?
Answer: C
Sudden, severe unilateral pelvic pain in a young female of reproductive age raises a high clinical suspicion for an acute ovarian torsion. A pelvic ultrasound with color Doppler is the definitive first-line imaging test because it allows the clinician to evaluate both the anatomical structure of the ovary and its vascular blood flow. A standard pelvic ultrasound without color Doppler is insufficient because it cannot reliably assess for the compromised arterial or venous flow that characterizes torsion. Computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging of the abdomen are incorrect choices for a suspected acute gynecologic emergency because they involve unnecessary radiation, take longer to perform, and are less sensitive for evaluating real-time ovarian vascularity.
11. 121 of 150. A 70-year-old female presents with a new diabetic foot ulcer featuring 2 cm of surrounding erythema and purulent drainage. Her hemoglobin A1c is 11.5% and she takes metformin monotherapy.
Answer: A
This patient presents with a mild diabetic foot infection, indicated by erythema and purulent drainage, alongside severe uncontrolled hyperglycemia. Guidelines recommend broad-spectrum oral antibiotics covering common pathogens, making amoxicillin-clavulanate appropriate, whereas cephalexin lacks sufficient anaerobic and gram-negative coverage. Furthermore, an A1c of 11.5% severely impairs wound healing and immune response, requiring immediate intervention. Initiating basal insulin in the clinic addresses this acutely, whereas referring to endocrinology delays necessary glycemic control. Ordering an arterial doppler is for ischemic ulcers, not primarily infected ones with adequate pulses. Applying topical silver dressings alone is insufficient for an active clinical infection requiring systemic therapy.
12. 122 of 150. A patient with recurrent calcium oxalate nephrolithiasis and newly diagnosed essential hypertension requires pharmacological management. Which antihypertensive mechanism of action offers the most beneficial secondary effect for this specific patient?
Answer: B
Thiazide diuretics work via the inhibition of the sodium-chloride symporter in the distal convoluted tubule. A unique pharmacodynamic property of this class is that it enhances calcium reabsorption into the blood, thereby decreasing urinary calcium excretion. This makes thiazides an excellent choice for patients with hypertension and a history of calcium-based kidney stones. Option B correctly identifies this mechanism. Option A describes loop diuretics, which actually increase urinary calcium excretion and could worsen nephrolithiasis. Option C describes potassium-sparing diuretics like spironolactone, which do not significantly alter calcium excretion profiles. Option D describes calcium channel blockers, which are effective antihypertensives but do not provide the targeted benefit of reducing urinary calcium to prevent recurrent oxalate stones.
13. 123 of 150. A 70-year-old male takes his daily digoxin at 08:00. He arrives at the clinic at 09:30 complaining of mild fatigue, and the provider wants to evaluate his serum digoxin concentration.
Answer: B
To accurately assess a steady-state trough level, serum digoxin should be drawn at least 6 to 8 hours after the last dose, ideally just before the next dose. Drawing it at 09:30, only 1.5 hours post-dose, reflects the distribution phase and falsely elevates the result. Option A leads to an artificially high level that mimics toxicity. Option C is dangerous and increases the risk of actual toxicity. Option D is still too early, as noon is only four hours after the morning administration.
14. 126 of 150. An FNP is appraising a grounded theory study exploring maternal postpartum depression. To ensure the study's findings are trustworthy, the FNP looks for evidence that the authors took steps to mitigate the influence of personal researcher bias. Which methodological approach demonstrates this?
Answer: B
To establish confirmability, qualitative researchers use bracketing and reflexivity to consciously acknowledge and set aside their own preconceived notions, ensuring the findings genuinely reflect the participants' experiences rather than the researchers' assumptions. Option A is a quantitative sampling method that does not address internal bias. Option C addresses the breadth of the sample but does not control the researcher's subjective influence. Option D validates the findings with participants but does not actively manage the researcher's internal bias during the data collection phase.
15. 127 of 150. A 22-year-old asymptomatic female presents for a well-woman exam. She reports a new male sexual partner and uses oral contraceptives consistently. Which diagnostic testing panel is most appropriate?
Answer: A
The USPSTF and CDC recommend annual screening for chlamydia and gonorrhea in all sexually active women under 25 years. A vaginal swab using nucleic acid amplification testing is the most sensitive method. Option B is incorrect because routine HSV-2 screening is not recommended for asymptomatic individuals. Option C is incorrect because cervical cancer screening begins at age 21, but HPV co-testing is not recommended until age 30. Option D is incorrect because a urine culture checks for urinary tract infections, not routine STIs. This patient's age and new partner make annual chlamydia and gonorrhea screening the priority.