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AHA PALS Exam 2026 – Updated Study Guide, Practice Questions, and Detailed Rationales for Pediatric Advanced Life Support Certification

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The AHA PALS (Pediatric Advanced Life Support) exam evaluates healthcare providers’ knowledge and skills in pediatric resuscitation, emergency response, and advanced life support protocols. This preparation guide provides practice questions with detailed rationales and structured review materials to help learners reinforce key concepts and clinical decision-making. Using comprehensive exam prep resources supports confidence, competence, and readiness for pediatric advanced life support certification.

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Uploaded on
January 4, 2026
Number of pages
30
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Exam (elaborations)
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AHA PALS EXAM ACTUAL EXAM TEST BANK QUESTIONS AND CORRECT DETAILED ANSWERS
WITH RATIONALES (VERIFIED ANSWERS) |ALREADY GRADED A+||NEWEST VERSION 2026



BRADYCARDIA (Questions 1–30)
1. A 3-year-old presents with HR 48/min, lethargy, and poor perfusion. What is the first action?
A. Give atropine 0.02 mg/kg IV
B. Begin CPR
C. Place a defibrillator
D. Start epinephrine infusion

Answer: B — Begin CPR
Rationale: HR <60 with poor perfusion and altered mental status → pre-arrest bradycardia.
CPR is priority.



2. In pediatric bradycardia with a pulse and poor perfusion, which drug is recommended if
atropine is ineffective?
A. Dopamine
B. Epinephrine
C. Amiodarone
D. Adenosine

Answer: B — Epinephrine
Rationale: After atropine or if severe bradycardia persists → epinephrine 0.01 mg/kg IV/IO.



3. Which of the following is a common cause of bradycardia in children?
A. Hyperthermia
B. Hypoxia
C. Dehydration
D. Hyperglycemia

Answer: B — Hypoxia
Rationale: In pediatrics, bradycardia is usually secondary to hypoxia, not primary cardiac
disease.



4. First-line drug for symptomatic bradycardia in a child?
A. Atropine
B. Adenosine


2026 2027 GRADED A+

,2|Page


C. Epinephrine
D. Amiodarone

Answer: A — Atropine
Rationale: Symptomatic bradycardia with poor perfusion → Atropine 0.02 mg/kg IV/IO (min
0.1 mg, max 0.5 mg).



5. When is transcutaneous pacing indicated in pediatric bradycardia?
A. HR 90 with poor perfusion
B. Severe bradycardia unresponsive to drugs
C. Tachycardia >200 bpm
D. Stable bradycardia with normal perfusion

Answer: B — Severe bradycardia unresponsive to drugs
Rationale: Temporary pacing is used only if atropine/epinephrine fail and patient remains
unstable.



6. HR <60/min in an infant, lethargic, with weak pulses. Next step?
A. Ventilate with 100% O₂
B. Give adenosine
C. Observe
D. IV antibiotics

Answer: A — Ventilate with 100% O₂
Rationale: Most pediatric bradycardia is hypoxia-induced, so ventilation is critical.



7. Maximum single dose of atropine in children?
A. 0.5 mg
B. 1 mg
C. 0.3 mg
D. 2 mg

Answer: A — 0.5 mg
Rationale: Atropine dosing: 0.02 mg/kg IV/IO, min 0.1 mg, max 0.5 mg per dose.



8. Bradycardia with signs of shock requires:
A. Only oxygen
B. CPR and IV access


2026 2027 GRADED A+

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C. Observation
D. Only atropine

Answer: B — CPR and IV access
Rationale: Poor perfusion → immediate CPR + drugs once IV/IO access obtained.



9. Which rhythm is most commonly associated with pediatric bradycardia?
A. Sinus bradycardia
B. SVT
C. Ventricular fibrillation
D. Junctional rhythm

Answer: A — Sinus bradycardia
Rationale: Most pediatric bradycardia is sinus and secondary to hypoxia or acidosis.



10. Pediatric bradycardia algorithm emphasizes:
A. Drugs before CPR
B. CPR first if poor perfusion
C. Observation
D. Immediate defibrillation

Answer: B — CPR first if poor perfusion
Rationale: CAB approach: compressions take priority if perfusion is inadequate.




TACHYCARDIA (Questions 31–65)
31. A 7-year-old has HR 240, hypotension, altered mental status, narrow QRS. First action?
A. Vagal maneuvers
B. Adenosine IV push
C. Synchronized cardioversion
D. Amiodarone infusion

Answer: C — Synchronized cardioversion
Rationale: Unstable SVT → electric cardioversion is first-line.




2026 2027 GRADED A+

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