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NRNP 6560 Midterm Exam (2026–2027) – Comprehensive Family Nurse Practitioner Study Guide with Updated Clinical Guidelines

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This document is a complete study resource for students enrolled in NRNP 6560: Family Nurse Practitioner courses, providing thorough preparation for the 2026/2027 midterm exam. It contains exam-style questions and scenarios aligned with the latest evidence-based clinical guidelines, enabling learners to practice critical thinking and clinical decision-making. The resource emphasizes comprehensive FNP knowledge, including primary care management across the lifespan, assessment, diagnosis, treatment planning, pharmacology considerations, preventive care, and patient education.

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Institution
NRNP 6560 2026/2027 | Comprehensive F
Course
NRNP 6560 2026/2027 | Comprehensive F

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Uploaded on
January 22, 2026
Number of pages
77
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Exam (elaborations)
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Questions & answers

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  • nrnp 6560 midterm exam

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NRNP 6560 Midterm Exam 2026/2027 |
Comprehensive Family Nurse Practitioner
Midterm Preparation with Updated Clinical
Guidelines

Assessment of surgical risk - ANSWERS-- Unstable cardiac condition (recent
MI, active angina, active HF, uncontrolled HTN, severe valvular disease),
concern with CAD, CHF. arrhythmia, CVD

- patient stable or unstable?

- urgency of the procedure (oncology will be time sensitive)

- risk of procedure

- nutritional status

- immune competence

- determine functional capacity (need to be more than 4 METS, more than 10
METs makes low risk)



Low risk surgeries - ANSWERS-catarcts

breast biopsy

cystoscopy, vasectomy

laporascopic procedures

Plastic surgery



intermediate risk surgeries - ANSWERS-Head/ neck surgery

thyroidectomy

Intraperitoneal

Prostate

,Laminectomy

Hip/ knee

Hysterectomy

cholecystectomy

nephrectomy

non majot intrathoracic



High risk surgeries - ANSWERS-aortic/ cabg

transplants

spinal reconstruction

peripheral vascular surgery

Surgery risk classes - ANSWERS-Class 1: benefits outweigh risk, should be
done

Class 2a: reasonable to perform

Class 2b: should be considered

Class 3: rarely appropriate



General rules for surgery: testing - ANSWERS-ECG before surgery only if
coronary disease, except when low risk surgery

Stress test not indicated before surgery

Do not do prophylactic coronary revascularization



Meds before surgery - ANSWERS-- Diabetic agents: Use insulin therapy to
maintain glycemic goals(iii) Discontinue biguanides, alpha glucosidase
inhibitors, thiazolidinediones, sulfonylureas, and GLP-1 agonists

- Do not start aspirin before surgery

- Stop Warfarin 5 days before surgery. May be bridged with Lovenox.

- Do not stop statin before surgery

,- Do not start beta-blocker on day of surgery, but may continue




Lee's revised cardiac risk index - ANSWERS-6 points:

High risk surgery = 1

CAD = 1

CHF = 1

Cerebrovascular disease = 1

DM 1 on insulin = 1

Creat greater than 2 = 1



1 = low risk

2 = moderate risk

3 = high risk



SCIP pre-operative infection measures - ANSWERS-- Prophylactic antibiotics
should be received within 1 h prior to surgical incision

- be selected for activity against the most probable antimicrobial
contaminants

- be discontinued within 24 h after the surgery end-time



Postoperative infection reduction methods - ANSWERS-- pre-op hair removal
(clippers)

- wash hands

- normothermia

- maintain euglycemia

- urinary catheters are to be removed within the first two postoperative days

, Osteoarthritis: what, incidence - ANSWERS-Slow destruction of bones/ joint
followed by production of replacement collagen which causes inflammatory
changes



- older than 60

- more female after 55

- more black than white women

- men and women equal risk between 45 - 55

- abnormal height or weight (obesity)

- repetitive movement

- prior trauma (sprains/ dislocations)

- diabetic neuropathy

- genetic



Osteoarthritis findings and diagnostics - ANSWERS-- Pain in weight bearing
joints

- stiffness after sitting, gets better when arising

- feeling of instability on stairs

- fine motor skills deficit

- larger affected joints

- Heberden nodules (bony bumps on the finger joint closest to the fingernail)

- Bouchard's nodules (bony bumps on the middle joint of the finger)

- limited ROM with crepitus



- xr shows narrowing of joint space (need anteroposterior and lateral knee
films bilaterally)

- synovial fluid is clear and without WBC
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