– Comprehensive Practice Questions and Exam Preparation
Material
A patient has had a large anterior myocardial infarction last month and developed a
ventricular aneurysm. He now has episodes of ventricular tachycardia that are not prevented
or converted with ant dysrhythmic agents. An implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) is
implanted. Four days after surgery he develops ventricular tachycardia. The ICD has
delivered three shocks but has not converted the rhythm. He is pulseless and apneic.
Cardiopulmonary resuscitation is in progress. What is the priority action now?
A.
Administer epinephrine IV.
B.
Administer amiodarone.
C.
Defibrillate.
D.
Reset the ICD. - Correct Answer -Defibrillate
A 28-year-old woman is admitted to the critical care unit from the emergency department
with a diagnosis of asthma. Her initial arterial blood gases on a 28% Ventura mask are as
follows:
PH 7.48
PaCO2 30 mm Hg
HCO3 24 me/L
PaO2 64 mm Hg
Which of the following repeat arterial blood gases on 40% oxygen indicate that the patient's
condition is worsening?
A.
PH 7.48, PaCO2 30 mm Hg, PaO2 68 mm Hg
B.
PH 7.46, PaCO2 32 mm Hg, PaO2 61 mm Hg
C.
PH 7.40, PaCO2 40 mm Hg, PaO2 62 mm Hg
D.
PH 7.39, PaCO2 30 mm Hg, PaO2 60 mm Hg - Correct Answer -C.
,PH 7.40, PaCO2 40 mm Hg, PaO2 62 mm Hg
The case study shows stage II asthma. Option c shows stage III asthma. The patient is still
breathing at a fast rate, but carbon dioxide is starting to be retained as evidenced by the
increase of the PaCO2 into normal range. Options a and b are still stage II. Option d shows a
respiratory alkalosis with a metabolic acidosis because you would have expected the pH to
be in an alkalotic range with the PaCO2 of 30.
A patient experiencing alcohol withdrawal syndrome describes the swirls in the wallpaper as
being worms. This is an example of which of the following?
A.
Delusion
B.
Hallucination
C.
Illusion
D.
Visual impairment - Correct Answer -C.
Illusion
An illusion is a misperception or misinterpretation of an actual external stimulus. Illusions
and hallucinations (a perception that has no actual external stimulus) are common during
alcohol withdrawal syndrome.
A patient arrives in the emergency department with multiple gunshot wounds. He requires
massive transfusion for blood loss from chest and abdominal wounds. The
electrocardiogram should be observed closely for changes indicative of which of the
following?
A.
Atrioventricular block
B.
Hyperkalemia
C.
Hypercalcemia
D.
Hypomagnesemia - Correct Answer -Hyperkalemia
Banked blood is high in potassium because of hemolysis. Look for tall, peaked T waves and
widening of the QRS complex. Other considerations with massive transfusion of banked
,blood are hypocalcemia, hypothermia, and decreased tissue oxygen delivery caused by
decreased levels of 2, 3-diphosphoglycerate.
A 65-year-old woman reports severe dyspnea 2 days after abdominal surgery. She is
transferred to the critical care unit. On 5 L of oxygen by nasal cannula, her arterial blood
gases are as follows:
PH 7.39
PaCO2 35 mm Hg
HCO3 19 me/L
PaO2 40 mm Hg
Arterial oxygen saturation 75%
Why does this patient have hypoxemia without hypercapnia?
A.
Because carbon dioxide is more diffusible than oxygen
B.
Because carbon dioxide has more driving pressure
C.
Because carbon dioxide is less diffusible than oxygen
D.
Because carbon dioxide excretion by the kidney is increased - Correct Answer -Because
carbon dioxide is more diffusible than oxygen
Carbon dioxide is 20 times more diffusible than oxygen. In conditions that affect diffusion
but do not affect ventilation, expect the PaO2 to be decreased and the PaCO2 to be normal
(or decreased in hyperventilation, as in this patient). If ventilation were affected, such as if
this patient were fatiguing, the PaCO2 then would increase. Driving pressure is the fraction
of the gas in inspired air multiplied by the barometric pressure. Because carbon dioxide is
~0.5% of inspired air, the driving pressure would be very low. The kidney eliminates
bicarbonate and hydrogen ions, but the lungs eliminate carbon dioxide.
A 55-year-old patient has headache, nuchal rigidity, photophobia, and positive Kerning’s and
Brzezinski’s signs. These are consistent with which of the following?
A.
Intracranial hemorrhage
B.
Subarachnoid hemorrhage
C.
Epidural hemorrhage
, D.
Subdural hemorrhage - Correct Answer -Subarachnoid hemorrhage
When there is bleeding from an aneurysm, that blood irritates the meninges. The clinical
presentation is very similar to meningitis. This clinical presentation is not consistent with
intracranial, epidural, or subdural bleeding because the blood is not in contact with the
meninges in those situations.
An extra heart sound preceding S1 is most likely an S4 if the stethoscopes:
A.
Diaphragm is over the apex.
B.
Bell is over the aortic area.
C.
Diaphragm is over the aortic area.
D.
Bell is over the apex. - Correct Answer -bell is over the apex.
S3 and S4 are low pitched, so choose options with the bell being used. S3 and S4 are heard
at the mitral area (i.e., apex) unless the right ventricular is affected, and then they are heard
in the tricuspid area.
Low-Pitched is best heard with Bell
The charge nurse on the 7 pm to 7 am shift was asked to assist a group of nurses to resolve
their conflict so that their two opposing goals are discarded and new goals are adopted. This
is an example of which of the following?
A.
Smoothing of conflict
B.
Facilitating collaboration
C.
Encouraging compromise
D.
Democratic approach - Correct Answer -Facilitating collaboration
This is an example of facilitating collaboration. The nurse is, in essence, acting as mediator to
assist these two groups in developing common goals. In smoothing, you would try to reduce