(OA Final Exam) Comprehensive Practice
Exam — 70 Questions and Answers.
This exam covers all domains of holistic health assessment including health history, physical
examination techniques, documentation, clinical reasoning, and evidence-based practice.
Questions are structured in NCLEX-style format with a difficulty mix of 30% easy, 50%
moderate, and 20% difficult.
QUESTION 1:
During a comprehensive health history, a patient reports a family history of breast cancer in
their mother and maternal grandmother. What is the most appropriate nursing action in
response to this information?
A) Reassure the patient that family history cannot be changed
B) Document the information and assess the patient's knowledge of breast self-examination
C) Immediately refer the patient for genetic counseling
D) Advise the patient to begin annual mammograms regardless of age
CORRECT ANSWER: B
RATIONALE: The priority is to document accurate family history and assess the patient's
current knowledge and practices regarding breast self-examination and screening guidelines.
While genetic counseling may be appropriate, it requires further assessment. Reassurance
without action is inadequate, and mammography recommendations should follow evidence-
based guidelines based on age and risk factors.
QUESTION 2:
A nurse is assessing a patient's heart sounds and hears a "lub-dub" sound. The "lub" (S1)
heart sound is best described as:
A) Closure of the semilunar valves (aortic and pulmonic)
B) Closure of the atrioventricular valves (mitral and tricuspid)
C) Blood flowing into the ventricles during diastole
,D) Opening of the atrioventricular valves during systole
CORRECT ANSWER: B
RATIONALE: The S1 heart sound ("lub") is produced by the closure of the atrioventricular
valves (mitral and tricuspid) at the beginning of systole. S2 ("dub") is produced by semilunar
valve closure at the end of systole. Understanding this distinction is fundamental to cardiac
auscultation.
QUESTION 3:
During an abdominal assessment, in what order should the nurse perform the four basic
assessment techniques?
A) Palpation, percussion, auscultation, inspection
B) Inspection, auscultation, percussion, palpation
C) Auscultation, inspection, palpation, percussion
D) Inspection, palpation, percussion, auscultation
CORRECT ANSWER: B
RATIONALE: The correct order for abdominal assessment is inspection, auscultation,
percussion, then palpation. Auscultation precedes palpation and percussion because
palpation and percussion can alter bowel sounds, leading to inaccurate assessment findings.
This sequence is unique to abdominal assessment.
QUESTION 4:
A nurse assesses a patient's lung sounds and hears continuous, high-pitched musical sounds
primarily during expiration. These sounds are best described as:
A) Rhonchi
B) Wheezes
C) Crackles (rales)
D) Stridor
CORRECT ANSWER: B
,RATIONALE: Wheezes are continuous, high-pitched musical sounds typically heard during
expiration, caused by air moving through narrowed or obstructed airways (as in asthma or
COPD). Rhonchi are lower-pitched snoring sounds. Crackles are discontinuous popping
sounds. Stridor is a harsh inspiratory sound indicating upper airway obstruction.
QUESTION 5:
Using the SBAR communication tool, a nurse calling a provider about a patient's change in
condition should provide the "Background" information in which order?
A) Current vital signs and assessment findings
B) Patient's name, admitting diagnosis, and relevant medical history
C) What the nurse thinks is happening and recommended action
D) The specific concern that triggered the call
CORRECT ANSWER: B
RATIONALE: In SBAR, Background includes the patient's name, admitting diagnosis, relevant
medical history, and recent status. Situation is the current concern. Assessment is what the
nurse thinks is happening. Recommendation is the requested action. Proper SBAR sequencing
ensures clear, structured communication.
QUESTION 6:
A patient presents with yellow discoloration of the skin and sclera. The nurse documents this
finding as:
A) Cyanosis
B) Pallor
C) Jaundice
D) Erythema
CORRECT ANSWER: C
RATIONALE: Jaundice is the yellow discoloration of skin, sclera, and mucous membranes
caused by elevated bilirubin levels (hyperbilirubinemia). Cyanosis is blue discoloration from
, poor oxygenation. Pallor is pale skin from reduced blood flow. Erythema is redness from
inflammation or increased blood flow.
QUESTION 7:
A nurse is preparing to assess a patient's apical pulse. The correct anatomical landmark for
this assessment is:
A) The second intercostal space at the left sternal border
B) The fifth intercostal space at the midclavicular line
C) The third intercostal space at the right sternal border
D) The fourth intercostal space at the left anterior axillary line
CORRECT ANSWER: B
RATIONALE: The apical pulse is best assessed at the fifth intercostal space at the midclavicular
line, also known as the point of maximal impulse (PMI). This location corresponds to the apex
of the heart where the left ventricle is closest to the chest wall, allowing for the most accurate
assessment of heart rate and rhythm.
QUESTION 8:
During inspection of a patient's oral cavity, the nurse observes white patches on the buccal
mucosa that cannot be scraped off. This finding is most consistent with:
A) Oral candidiasis (thrush)
B) Leukoplakia
C) Aphthous ulcers
D) Herpes simplex stomatitis
CORRECT ANSWER: B
RATIONALE: Leukoplakia presents as white patches on the oral mucosa that cannot be scraped
off and are not attributable to any other condition. Oral candidiasis (thrush) presents as white
plaques that can be scraped off, leaving an erythematous base. Aphthous ulcers are painful
round lesions with a white center. Herpes simplex presents as vesicles that ulcerate.