16th Edition
• Author(s)Kevin T. Patton; Gary A. Thibodeau
TEST BANK
1. Reference: Ch. 1 — Introduction: Language of science and
medicine (terminology)
Question Stem: A newly graduated nurse documents a
wound as being on the patient’s right lateral antebrachial
region. A preceptor asks which area the nurse meant.
Which anatomical description correctly translates that
term?
A. Lateral forearm on the right side
B. Inner (medial) upper arm on the right side
C. Front of the right wrist
D. Back of the right elbow
, Correct Answer: A
Rationale — Correct: “Antebrachial” refers to the forearm
and “lateral” indicates the outer side; thus the phrase
denotes the right lateral forearm. This uses standard
anatomical terminology for clear documentation.
Rationale — Incorrect:
B. Medial upper arm is brachial/medial, not antebrachial.
C. Wrist is carpal, not antebrachial.
D. Back of elbow is olecranon/posterior elbow, not
antebrachial.
Teaching Point: Use standardized anatomical terms (e.g.,
antebrachial = forearm) to avoid documentation errors.
Citation: Patton & Thibodeau, 2024, Ch. 1: Language of
science and medicine
2. Reference: Ch. 1 — Anatomical position & directions
Question Stem: A patient’s chart notes a scar on the
proximal medial tibia. For assessment, where should the
nurse inspect?
A. Inner portion of the upper part of the lower leg near the
knee
B. Outer portion of the lower leg near the ankle
C. Front of the thigh near the hip
D. Back of the lower leg near the calf
Correct Answer: A
Rationale — Correct: “Proximal” means nearer the trunk
, and “medial tibia” indicates the inner side of the shin near
the knee — appropriate for inspection.
Rationale — Incorrect:
B. Distal and lateral would indicate ankle/outer lower leg.
C. Thigh/hip are femoral/inguinal regions, not tibial.
D. Posterior lower leg is calf (sural), not medial tibia.
Teaching Point: Proximal/ distal + medial/lateral pinpoint
exact anatomical locations for care.
Citation: Patton & Thibodeau, 2024, Ch. 1: Anatomical
position & directions
3. Reference: Ch. 1 — Planes of the body
Question Stem: A nurse prepares a patient for a ventral
abdominal incision and explains the surgeon will cut along
a plane that divides the body into front and back. Which
plane is being described?
A. Coronal (frontal) plane
B. Transverse (horizontal) plane
C. Sagittal plane
D. Oblique plane
Correct Answer: A
Rationale — Correct: The coronal (frontal) plane divides
the body into anterior (ventral) and posterior (dorsal)
portions — appropriate for describing front/back incisions.
Rationale — Incorrect:
B. Transverse divides superior and inferior, not front/back.
, C. Sagittal divides left and right.
D. Oblique is at an angle, not specifically front/back.
Teaching Point: Coronal/frontal plane separates anterior
and posterior body portions.
Citation: Patton & Thibodeau, 2024, Ch. 1: Planes of the
body
4. Reference: Ch. 1 — Levels of organization (cells → tissues
→ organs)
Question Stem: A nurse educator asks why epithelial tissue
lines internal cavities and forms barriers. Which structural
feature of epithelial cells explains this function?
A. Tight junctions between cells forming selective barriers
B. Abundant extracellular matrix providing tensile strength
C. Large irregularly shaped cells with solitary nuclei
D. High vascularity to supply adjacent tissues
Correct Answer: A
Rationale — Correct: Epithelial cells have tight junctions
that create selective barriers for protection and controlled
exchange. This underlies barrier function at organ surfaces.
Rationale — Incorrect:
B. Extracellular matrix is characteristic of connective tissue,
not epithelium.
C. Cell shape/nuclei description is nonspecific and doesn’t
explain barrier.
D. Epithelium is typically avascular; it receives nutrients by