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Medical Terminology Test Bank 2026 | Ann Ehrlich 9th Ed | Nursing & Allied Health MCQs

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Medical Terminology Test Bank 2026 | Ann Ehrlich 9th Ed | Nursing & Allied Health MCQs Description: Build true fluency in medical language with this comprehensive Medical Terminology Test Bank aligned to Medical Terminology for Health Professions, 9th Edition by Ann Ehrlich—one of the most widely adopted and trusted texts in health sciences education. This digital resource delivers FULL textbook coverage across all units and chapters, featuring 50 NCLEX-style multiple-choice questions (MCQs) per chapter with clear, evidence-based rationales. Each item is designed to reinforce word construction, spelling accuracy, pronunciation awareness, and correct clinical usage, helping learners move beyond memorization to confident application. Questions emphasize real-world clinical language scenarios, including word roots, prefixes, and suffixes; body systems terminology; diagnostic, surgical, and procedural terms; pharmacologic and laboratory language; and documentation accuracy. The result is faster recall, stronger interpretation of medical records, and greater confidence in professional communication—skills essential across nursing and allied health settings. Ideal for Medical Terminology, Foundations of Health Professions, Pre-Nursing and Nursing Fundamentals (Terminology Units), and Allied Health programs (CNA, MA, LPN, EMT, Radiology, Pharmacy Tech), this test bank also supports Anatomy & Physiology and pre-clinical health sciences coursework. Key Features: Full-chapter coverage of Ann Ehrlich’s 9th Edition 50 high-quality MCQs per chapter with verified rationales Application-focused clinical scenarios Improves spelling, interpretation, and usage Time-efficient, exam-ready digital format Ideal for nursing and allied health exam prep Keywords: medical terminology test bank nursing test bank 2026 Ann Ehrlich study guide health professions terminology MCQs medical terminology practice questions nursing terminology exam prep allied health terminology test bank medical language MCQs Hashtags: #MedicalTerminology #NursingTestBank #AlliedHealthStudents #HealthProfessions #NCLEXPrep #MedicalLanguage #NursingSchool #PreNursing #ClinicalEducation #ExamPrep

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Institution
Nursing LPN
Course
Nursing LPN

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MEDICAL TERMINOLOGY FOR
HEALTH PROFESSIONS
9TH EDITION
• AUTHOR(S)ANN EHRLICH



TEST BANK

1. Reference: Ch. 1 — Word Roots & Combining Forms
Stem: A chart note lists the term arthr/o/pathy. Based on
the word parts, what does this term most accurately
indicate?
A. Inflammation of a joint
B. Disease of a joint
C. Surgical repair of a joint
D. Study of joints
Correct answer: B
Rationales — Correct: B. arthr/o = joint; -pathy = disease
or disorder, so arthropathy means disease of a joint. (2

, sentences)
Rationales — A: -itis (not -pathy) indicates inflammation;
arthr/itis would be correct for inflammation. (1 sentence)
Rationales — C: -plasty or -rrhaphy indicate repair or
suturing, not -pathy. (1 sentence)
Rationales — D: -logy indicates study; -pathy does not. (1
sentence)
Teaching point: -pathy = disease; -itis = inflammation.
Citation: Ehrlich, A. (2022). Medical Terminology for Health
Professions (9th ed.). Ch. 1.
2. Reference: Ch. 1 — Prefixes & Contrasting Prefixes
Stem: A patient record lists hyperglycemia. Which prefix
analysis explains the clinical meaning?
A. hyper- (excessive) → elevated blood glucose
B. hypo- (below) → low blood glucose
C. eu- (normal) → normal blood glucose
D. tachy- (fast) → rapid blood glucose rise
Correct answer: A
Rationales — Correct: A. hyper- = excessive, glyc- = sugar, -
emia = blood condition; hyperglycemia = high blood
glucose. (2 sentences)
Rationales — B: hypo- is opposite (low); would form
hypoglycemia. (1 sentence)
Rationales — C: eu- means good/normal, not used here. (1
sentence)
Rationales — D: tachy- refers to rate/speed, not
concentration. (1 sentence)

, Teaching point: hyper- = high; hypo- = low.
Citation: Ehrlich, A. (2022). Medical Terminology for Health
Professions (9th ed.). Ch. 1.
3. Reference: Ch. 1 — Suffixes Meaning “Procedure”
Stem: Which suffix would convert the root cardi/o into a
term meaning “incision into the heart”?
A. -ectomy
B. -otomy
C. -ostomy
D. -plasty
Correct answer: B
Rationales — Correct: B. -otomy means cutting into
(incision); cardiotomy = incision into the heart. (2
sentences)
Rationales — A: -ectomy = removal (cardiectomy would be
removal). (1 sentence)
Rationales — C: -ostomy = creating a permanent opening,
not a simple incision. (1 sentence)
Rationales — D: -plasty = surgical repair or reconstruction.
(1 sentence)
Teaching point: -otomy = incision; -ectomy = removal.
Citation: Ehrlich, A. (2022). Medical Terminology for Health
Professions (9th ed.). Ch. 1.
4. Reference: Ch. 1 — Determining Meanings by Word Parts
Stem: A student encounters derm/o/pathy in a case study.
Which is the best clinical interpretation?

, A. Infection of the skin
B. Disease of the skin
C. Instrument to view skin
D. Pain in the skin
Correct answer: B
Rationales — Correct: B. derm/o = skin; -pathy = disease;
dermopathy = disease of the skin. (2 sentences)
Rationales — A: Infection would be -itis or described as
infectious dermatitis; -pathy is broader. (1 sentence)
Rationales — C: -scope indicates instrument to view. (1
sentence)
Rationales — D: -algia indicates pain. (1 sentence)
Teaching point: Use roots + suffix to deduce meaning.
Citation: Ehrlich, A. (2022). Medical Terminology for Health
Professions (9th ed.). Ch. 1.
5. Reference: Ch. 1 — Combining Vowel Use
Stem: In building the term meaning “inflammation of the
stomach” which of these forms is correct?
A. gastritis
B. gastrootis
C. gastroitis
D. gastrittis
Correct answer: C
Rationales — Correct: C. gastr/o (stomach combining
form) + -itis = gastroitis is correct formation; combining
vowel o links root to suffix starting with a vowel. (2
sentences)

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