APEA 3P ACTUAL EXAM 2026/2027 | Updated Latest
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SECTION 1: Assessment & Diagnostic Reasoning (Q1-35)
Subsection 1A: History & Physical Exam (Q1-20)
Q1. A 58-year-old male presents for a wellness visit. He reports no symptoms. Blood
pressure is 142/88 mmHg on two separate occasions. According to ACC/AHA 2026
guidelines, what is the next best step?
A. Reassure; recheck in 1 year
B. Initiate lifestyle modifications only
C. Initiate lifestyle modifications plus pharmacotherapy
D. Order 24-hour ambulatory BP monitoring before any treatment
Correct Answer: C. Initiate lifestyle modifications plus pharmacotherapy [CORRECT]
Rationale: Per ACC/AHA 2026, Stage 2 HTN (≥140/90) requires medication
regardless of 10-year ASCVD risk, plus lifestyle modification. D is incorrect because
confirmed office BP ≥140/90 on two occasions is sufficient for diagnosis and
treatment initiation.
Q2. During a cardiovascular exam, you palpate a sustained, heaving apical impulse at
the left mid-clavicular line in the 5th intercostal space. This finding is most consistent
with:
A. Left ventricular hypertrophy
B. Right ventricular hypertrophy
C. Mitral regurgitation
D. Pericardial effusion
Correct Answer: A. Left ventricular hypertrophy [CORRECT]
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Rationale: A sustained, heaving apical impulse indicates left ventricular hypertrophy
(pressure overload). RVH produces a parasternal heave, not an apical heave. Mitral
regurgitation causes a diffuse, hyperdynamic impulse, and pericardial effusion
muffles the impulse.
Q3. A 45-year-old female with BMI 32 reports loud snoring and daytime somnolence.
Her neck circumference is 16 inches. Which physical exam finding further increases
suspicion for obstructive sleep apnea?
A. Low-arched palate
B. Enlarged thyroid
C. Tonsillar hypertrophy (grade 3-4)
D. Deviated nasal septum
Correct Answer: C. Tonsillar hypertrophy (grade 3-4) [CORRECT]
Rationale: Tonsillar hypertrophy is a recognized risk factor for OSA. While a low-
arched palate and deviated septum may contribute, enlarged tonsils significantly
narrow the oropharyngeal airway. Thyromegaly is unrelated to OSA pathophysiology.
Q4. You are examining a patient with suspected carpal tunnel syndrome. Which
provocative test involves holding the wrists in flexion for 60 seconds to reproduce
symptoms?
A. Tinel sign
B. Phalen maneuver
C. Finkelstein test
D. Durkan compression test
Correct Answer: B. Phalen maneuver [CORRECT]
Rationale: Phalen maneuver (wrist flexion for 60 seconds) reproduces paresthesia in
median nerve distribution. Tinel involves percussion over the carpal tunnel.
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Finkelstein tests for de Quervain tenosynovitis. Durkan applies direct pressure over
the tunnel.
Q5. A 62-year-old male reports progressive dyspnea on exertion. On cardiac
auscultation, you hear a harsh crescendo-decrescendo systolic murmur at the right
upper sternal border radiating to the carotids. The murmur diminishes with handgrip.
This most likely represents:
A. Aortic stenosis
B. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
C. Mitral regurgitation
D. Aortic regurgitation
Correct Answer: A. Aortic stenosis [CORRECT]
Rationale: A harsh crescendo-decrescendo systolic murmur at the right upper
sternal border radiating to the carotids is classic for aortic stenosis. Handgrip
increases afterload, which would intensify HOCM and MR but diminish AS murmur
due to reduced transvalvular gradient.
Q6. During an abdominal exam, you note a positive Murphy sign. The patient
abruptly stops inspiration when you palpate under the right costal margin. This
finding is most specific for:
A. Acute appendicitis
B. Acute cholecystitis
C. Acute hepatitis
D. Peptic ulcer disease
Correct Answer: B. Acute cholecystitis [CORRECT]
Rationale: Murphy sign (inspiratory arrest with RUQ palpation) is highly specific for
acute cholecystitis due to an inflamed gallbladder descending onto the examining
hand. It is not associated with appendicitis, hepatitis, or PUD.
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Q7. A 28-year-old female presents with a 3-day history of sore throat and fever. On
exam, she has tender anterior cervical lymphadenopathy, tonsillar exudates, and
absence of cough. What is the most appropriate next step?
A. Start empiric amoxicillin
B. Perform rapid strep antigen test
C. Order throat culture only
D. Prescribe corticosteroids for symptom relief
Correct Answer: B. Perform rapid strep antigen test [CORRECT]
Rationale: The Centor criteria (fever, tonsillar exudates, tender anterior cervical
nodes, absence of cough) suggest Group A strep. Rapid antigen testing is the
recommended first-line diagnostic step per IDSA guidelines. Empiric antibiotics
without testing are inappropriate due to viral etiology prevalence.
Q8. A 70-year-old male with COPD presents with increased dyspnea. On percussion,
you note hyperresonance over the lung fields. On auscultation, breath sounds are
distant and expiratory wheezing is present. These findings are most consistent with:
A. Pneumothorax
B. Consolidation
C. Air trapping
D. Pleural effusion
Correct Answer: C. Air trapping [CORRECT]
Rationale: Hyperresonance, distant breath sounds, and expiratory wheezing in a
COPD patient indicate air trapping and hyperinflation. Pneumothorax would present
with unilateral hyperresonance and absent breath sounds. Consolidation causes
dullness and bronchial breath sounds. Effusion causes dullness and diminished
sounds.