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Exam (elaborations)

NSG 5140 Advanced Pathophysiology Midterm 2 Exam Questions, Answers & Rationales (2025/2026)

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Master NSG 5140 Advanced Pathophysiology Midterm 2 with this complete exam guide. Includes questions, correct answers, detailed rationales, and a high-yield study guide. Ideal for nursing students at top programs like Yale, Johns Hopkins, and Duke. Updated for 2025/2026, A+ graded. pathophysiology exam guide, NSG 5140 midterm 2, nursing test bank, advanced pathophysiology questions, nurse practitioner study, NCLEX prep, graduate nursing exam, medical pathophysiology, nursing school notes, A+ study guide, clinical pathophysiology, nursing student resources, pathophysiology rationales

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NSG 5140 Advanced Pathophysiology
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NSG 5140 Advanced Pathophysiology

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Uploaded on
December 1, 2025
Number of pages
35
Written in
2025/2026
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NSG 5140 ADVANCED PATHOPHYSIOLOGY –
MIDTERM 2 EXAM QUESTIONS AND CORRECT
ANSWERS WITH RATIONALES GRADED A+
2025\2026 update
1. Which is the primary pathophysiologic mechanism in acute myocardial
infarction?
A. Coronary vasospasm
B. Plaque rupture → thrombus → ischemia
C. Viral infection
D. Aortic stenosis
CORRECT ANSWER B
Rationale: Most MIs result from atherosclerotic plaque rupture → thrombosis →
occlusion → myocardial ischemia.


2. Which arrhythmia is most commonly associated with acute MI?
A. Atrial fibrillation
B. Ventricular tachycardia/fibrillation
C. Sinus bradycardia
D. Junctional rhythm
CORRECT ANSWER B
Rationale: Ischemia causes electrical instability → life-threatening ventricular
arrhythmias.


3. In left-sided heart failure, which compensatory mechanism is initially
activated?
A. Decreased sympathetic tone
B. Frank-Starling mechanism (increased preload)
C. Parasympathetic activation
D. Decreased renin secretion

,CORRECT ANSWER B
Rationale: Increased preload stretches myocardial fibers → stronger contraction
to maintain CO.


4. Which lab marker is most specific for liver synthetic function?
A. ALT
B. AST
C. Albumin
D. Bilirubin
CORRECT ANSWER C
Rationale: Low albumin indicates impaired hepatic protein synthesis.


5. Which type of shock is characterized by low systemic vascular resistance
and warm extremities?
A. Hypovolemic
B. Cardiogenic
C. Obstructive
D. Distributive (septic)
CORRECT ANSWER D
Rationale: Vasodilation → hypotension with warm peripheries.


6. Which electrolyte imbalance is most commonly associated with
chronic kidney disease? A. Hypokalemia
B. Hyperkalemia
C. Hypocalcemia only
D. Hypernatremia
CORRECT ANSWER B
Rationale: Reduced renal excretion → K⁺ retention.


7. Which type of necrosis is typical of ischemic heart tissue?

,A. Coagulative
B. Liquefactive
C. Caseous
D. Fat
CORRECT ANSWER A
Rationale: Ischemia preserves tissue architecture initially → coagulative
necrosis.


8. Which acid-base disturbance occurs in COPD with CO₂ retention?
A. Metabolic acidosis
B. Chronic respiratory acidosis (compensated by ↑ HCO₃⁻)
C. Metabolic alkalosis
D. Respiratory alkalosis
CORRECT ANSWER B
Rationale: Chronic CO₂ retention → renal compensation → increased HCO₃⁻.


9. Which lab marker rises earliest after myocardial injury?
A. CK-MB
B. Troponin
C. Myoglobin
D. LDH
CORRECT ANSWER C
Rationale: Myoglobin rises 1–3 hours post-injury; troponins are more specific.


10. Which mechanism causes edema in nephrotic syndrome?
A. Increased hydrostatic pressure
B. Decreased oncotic pressure (protein loss)
C. Increased lymph drainage
D. Hypernatremia

, CORRECT ANSWER B
Rationale: Proteinuria → hypoalbuminemia → fluid shifts into interstitial spaces.


11. Which lab value is most sensitive for early kidney injury?
A. BUN
B. Creatinine
C. Urine sodium
D. LDH
CORRECT ANSWER B
Rationale: Creatinine rises early with decreased GFR.


12. Which electrolyte abnormality is associated with Addison’s disease?
A. Hypernatremia, hypokalemia
B. Hypokalemia only
C. Hyponatremia, hyperkalemia
D. Hypercalcemia
CORRECT ANSWER C
Rationale: Aldosterone deficiency → Na⁺ loss, K⁺ retention.


13. Which pathophysiologic mechanism underlies DKA?
A. Excess insulin → hypoglycemia
B. Insulin deficiency → hyperglycemia → lipolysis → ketone production →
metabolic acidosis
C. Chronic hyperglycemia → protein catabolism
D. Increased glucose uptake
CORRECT ANSWER B
Rationale: Insulin deficiency prevents glucose utilization → fat breakdown →
ketone accumulation.

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