PARAMEDIC CERTIFICATION –QUESTIONS AND CORRECT ANSWERS
(VERIFIED ANSWERS) PLUS RATIONALES 2026 Q&A | INSTANT DOWNLOAD
PDF.
Core Domains
- Airway, Respiration, and Ventilation
- Cardiology and Resuscitation
- Trauma Assessment and Management
- Medical Emergencies and Immunology
- Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Pediatrics
- EMS Operations and Safety
- Pharmacology and Vector Administration
- Public Health and Legal/Ethical Issues
Introduction
The National Registry Paramedic Certification Examination is designed to
evaluate the entry-level competence of emergency medical services
professionals seeking higher-tier licensure. This comprehensive assessment
measures critical cognitive knowledge, advanced clinical skills, and rapid
diagnostic capabilities essential for managing acute prehospital crises.
, Comprising a rigorous mix of foundational theory, regulatory frameworks, and
complex scenario-based inquiries, the exam demands high-level critical thinking
and immediate, real-world decision-making. Candidates must demonstrate
proficiency across diverse patient populations and environmental challenges,
ensuring safe, effective, and ethically sound evidence-based practice under
high-stress conditions.*
Section One: Questions 1–100
1. A 64-year-old male presents with acute, crushing substernal chest pain radiating
to his left jaw. The 12-lead ECG reveals ST-segment elevation in leads II, III,
and aVF. Which coronary artery is most likely occluded?
A. Left anterior descending artery
B. Right coronary artery
C. Circumflex artery
D. Left main coronary artery
🟢 B. Right coronary artery
🔴 RATIONALE: ST-segment elevation in leads II, III, and aVF signifies an acute
,inferior wall myocardial infarction, which is predominantly supplied by the right
coronary artery (RCA) in most individuals.
2. During a routine transfer, a patient with a history of chronic renal failure
suddenly develops peaked T waves on the cardiac monitor. Which metabolic
derangement should you immediately suspect?
A. Hypokalemia
B. Hypocalcemia
C. Hyperkalemia
D. Hypernatremia
🟢 C. Hyperkalemia
🔴 RATIONALE: Peaked T waves are the classic early electrocardiographic
manifestation of hyperkalemia, a common life-threatening electrolyte imbalance in
patients with end-stage renal disease due to impaired potassium excretion.
3. You are managing a 28-year-old female patient who is unresponsive following
an opioid overdose. Her respiratory rate is 4 breaths/minute and shallow. What
is the primary physiological drive that has been suppressed by this toxin?
, A. Hypoxic drive
B. Hypercapnic drive
C. Proprioceptive drive
D. Volitional drive
🟢 B. Hypercapnic drive
🔴 RATIONALE: Central chemoreceptors normally respond to changes in arterial
carbon dioxide (P aCO2 ) and pH to regulate breathing. Opioids depress the
respiratory center in the brainstem, blunting this primary hypercapnic respiratory
drive.
4. A 45-year-old male is involved in a high-speed motor vehicle collision. He
exhibits severe respiratory distress, diminished breath sounds on the right side,
hyperresonance to percussion on the right, and jugular venous distention. What
is the most appropriate immediate intervention?
A. Immediate endotracheal intubation
B. Needle thoracostomy to the right chest
C. Insertion of an oropharyngeal airway
D. Needle thoracostomy to the left chest
(VERIFIED ANSWERS) PLUS RATIONALES 2026 Q&A | INSTANT DOWNLOAD
PDF.
Core Domains
- Airway, Respiration, and Ventilation
- Cardiology and Resuscitation
- Trauma Assessment and Management
- Medical Emergencies and Immunology
- Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Pediatrics
- EMS Operations and Safety
- Pharmacology and Vector Administration
- Public Health and Legal/Ethical Issues
Introduction
The National Registry Paramedic Certification Examination is designed to
evaluate the entry-level competence of emergency medical services
professionals seeking higher-tier licensure. This comprehensive assessment
measures critical cognitive knowledge, advanced clinical skills, and rapid
diagnostic capabilities essential for managing acute prehospital crises.
, Comprising a rigorous mix of foundational theory, regulatory frameworks, and
complex scenario-based inquiries, the exam demands high-level critical thinking
and immediate, real-world decision-making. Candidates must demonstrate
proficiency across diverse patient populations and environmental challenges,
ensuring safe, effective, and ethically sound evidence-based practice under
high-stress conditions.*
Section One: Questions 1–100
1. A 64-year-old male presents with acute, crushing substernal chest pain radiating
to his left jaw. The 12-lead ECG reveals ST-segment elevation in leads II, III,
and aVF. Which coronary artery is most likely occluded?
A. Left anterior descending artery
B. Right coronary artery
C. Circumflex artery
D. Left main coronary artery
🟢 B. Right coronary artery
🔴 RATIONALE: ST-segment elevation in leads II, III, and aVF signifies an acute
,inferior wall myocardial infarction, which is predominantly supplied by the right
coronary artery (RCA) in most individuals.
2. During a routine transfer, a patient with a history of chronic renal failure
suddenly develops peaked T waves on the cardiac monitor. Which metabolic
derangement should you immediately suspect?
A. Hypokalemia
B. Hypocalcemia
C. Hyperkalemia
D. Hypernatremia
🟢 C. Hyperkalemia
🔴 RATIONALE: Peaked T waves are the classic early electrocardiographic
manifestation of hyperkalemia, a common life-threatening electrolyte imbalance in
patients with end-stage renal disease due to impaired potassium excretion.
3. You are managing a 28-year-old female patient who is unresponsive following
an opioid overdose. Her respiratory rate is 4 breaths/minute and shallow. What
is the primary physiological drive that has been suppressed by this toxin?
, A. Hypoxic drive
B. Hypercapnic drive
C. Proprioceptive drive
D. Volitional drive
🟢 B. Hypercapnic drive
🔴 RATIONALE: Central chemoreceptors normally respond to changes in arterial
carbon dioxide (P aCO2 ) and pH to regulate breathing. Opioids depress the
respiratory center in the brainstem, blunting this primary hypercapnic respiratory
drive.
4. A 45-year-old male is involved in a high-speed motor vehicle collision. He
exhibits severe respiratory distress, diminished breath sounds on the right side,
hyperresonance to percussion on the right, and jugular venous distention. What
is the most appropriate immediate intervention?
A. Immediate endotracheal intubation
B. Needle thoracostomy to the right chest
C. Insertion of an oropharyngeal airway
D. Needle thoracostomy to the left chest