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FCCS PRE TEST & POST TEST ACTUAL EXAM 2026/2027 | 100+ Questions & Complete Solutions | Graded A+ | Latest Update | Pass Guaranteed - A+ Graded

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Pass the Fundamental Critical Care Support (FCCS) Pre Test and Post Test on your first attempt with this complete 2026/2027 resource featuring 100+ questions and complete solutions graded A+. This A+ Graded resource contains both pre test and post test actual exam questions with complete solutions covering all key critical care content areas for the FCCS certification including recognition and assessment of the critically ill patient, initial stabilization and resuscitation, airway management (indications for intubation, rapid sequence intubation RSI, difficult airway algorithm, extubation criteria, post-extubation management), mechanical ventilation (modes - AC, SIMV, PSV, PRVC; settings - Vt, RR, PEEP, FiO2; troubleshooting high/low pressure alarms; complications - barotrauma, volutrauma, auto-PEEP; ventilator-associated pneumonia VAP prevention; weaning parameters), shock identification and management (hypovolemic, cardiogenic, distributive - septic, neurogenic, anaphylactic; obstructive - PE, tension pneumothorax, cardiac tamponade; hemodynamic monitoring - CVP, MAP, SVR, ScvO2; vasopressor and inotropic therapy), acute respiratory failure (hypoxemic vs hypercapnic, ARDS Berlin criteria, lung-protective ventilation, prone positioning, neuromuscular blockade), cardiovascular emergencies (ACS - STEMI/NSTEMI/unstable angina management, acute decompensated heart failure, hypertensive emergency, acute aortic syndrome, cardiac dysrhythmias recognition and treatment - ACLS algorithms), neurologic emergencies (altered mental status, stroke assessment NIHSS, ischemic vs hemorrhagic stroke management, intracranial pressure ICP monitoring and management, status epilepticus, traumatic brain injury, spinal cord injury), sepsis and septic shock (qSOFA, SOFA scores, Surviving Sepsis Campaign guidelines, early goal-directed therapy EGDT, antimicrobial stewardship, source control), metabolic and endocrine emergencies (DKA, HHS, adrenal crisis, thyroid storm, myxedema coma, electrolyte disorders - sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium), renal emergencies (AKI - prerenal, intrinsic, postrenal; RIFLE/AKIN criteria; indications for renal replacement therapy RRT - hemodialysis, CRRT), hematologic emergencies (DIC, massive transfusion protocol MTP, TTP, HIT, coagulopathy management), gastrointestinal emergencies (upper and lower GI bleed, acute pancreatitis, acute liver failure, hepatic encephalopathy, abdominal compartment syndrome), trauma initial assessment (primary survey ABCDE, secondary survey, shock resuscitation, damage control resuscitation), poisoning and overdose (toxic ingestion, acetaminophen, salicylates, opioids, tricyclic antidepressants, calcium channel blockers, beta-blockers, toxic alcohol ingestion, naloxone administration, activated charcoal, antidotes), ethics in critical care (code status discussions, surrogate decision-making, brain death determination, organ donation), and end-of-life care in the ICU. Each solution includes detailed rationales and clinical algorithms. Perfect for healthcare professionals including intensivists, critical care nurses, emergency physicians, respiratory therapists, and trainees preparing for FCCS certification or recertification. With our Pass Guarantee, you can confidently achieve an A+ on your FCCS Pre Test and Post Test. Download your complete FCCS Pre Test and Post Test Actual Exam 2026/2027 guide instantly!

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FCCS PRE TEST & POST TEST ACTUAL EXAM 2026/2027 |
100+ Questions & Complete Solutions | Graded A+ |
Latest Update | Pass Guaranteed - A+ Graded




Section 1: Recognition & Assessment of the Critically Ill Patient
(Questions 1-15)




Question 1

A nurse notices a postoperative patient has become increasingly lethargic over the
past hour. Vital signs are: HR 48, BP 82/54, RR 6, SpO2 88% on 2L NC. Which action
should the nurse take first?

A. Increase oxygen to 4L NC and reassess in 15 minutes
B. Activate the rapid response team (RRT) immediately
C. Administer 1L normal saline bolus
D. Obtain a stat 12-lead EKG

B. Activate the rapid response team (RRT) immediately [CORRECT]

Rationale: This patient meets multiple RRT activation criteria: HR <40 (bradycardia
48), SBP <90 (hypotension 82/54), RR <8 (respiratory depression 6), and SpO2 <90%
despite oxygen. This represents impending cardiopulmonary arrest. While all other
interventions (oxygen, fluids, EKG) are important, simultaneous RRT activation
ensures appropriate personnel and equipment are mobilized immediately. Delaying
RRT activation to perform individual interventions wastes critical time. FCCS
Competency: Early recognition of critical illness and RRT activation. SCCM Guideline:
RRT activation criteria include vital sign derangements and acute mental status

,changes. Critical Care Principle: Activate RRT when multiple vital sign abnormalities
or acute deterioration occur—do not delay for diagnostic workup.




Question 2

During the primary survey of a trauma patient, the team notes gurgling sounds with
respiration and sees vomitus in the mouth. Which intervention takes priority?

A. Apply cervical collar and logroll the patient
B. Perform immediate oropharyngeal suctioning
C. Insert an oropharyngeal airway
D. Begin bag-valve-mask ventilation

B. Perform immediate oropharyngeal suctioning [CORRECT]

Rationale: Gurgling sounds with vomitus in the airway indicates obstruction—
suctioning must precede any other airway intervention. The airway must be cleared
before inserting devices or ventilating (which would force vomitus deeper). Cervical
collar (Option A) is important for trauma but does not address the immediate life
threat. OPA insertion (Option C) without suctioning pushes debris posteriorly. BVM
(Option D) without clearing obstruction causes aspiration. FCCS Competency: Airway
obstruction recognition and immediate management. SCCM Guideline: ABCDE
approach—Airway patency is always first; suction visible debris before any other
intervention. Critical Care Principle: A clear airway is the foundation of resuscitation;
never insert airways or ventilate through obstructed passages.




Question 3

A patient is found unresponsive. During the primary survey, the team assesses
breathing by looking, listening, and feeling. The patient has agonal respirations at 4
breaths/minute. Which action is most appropriate?

A. Insert a nasopharyngeal airway and provide supplemental oxygen
B. Begin immediate bag-valve-mask ventilation with 100% oxygen

,C. Perform a head-tilt chin-lift and assess for foreign body obstruction
D. Administer naloxone 2 mg IV immediately

B. Begin immediate bag-valve-mask ventilation with 100% oxygen [CORRECT]

Rationale: Agonal respirations are ineffective and indicate impending respiratory
arrest. Immediate BVM ventilation with 100% oxygen is required while preparing for
definitive airway management. NPA + O2 (Option A) is insufficient for agonal
breathing. Head-tilt chin-lift (Option C) opens the airway but does not provide
ventilation. Naloxone (Option D) is appropriate if opioid overdose suspected but
does not replace immediate ventilation—ventilate first, then administer antidote.
FCCS Competency: Recognition of respiratory failure and immediate ventilatory
support. SCCM Guideline: Agonal respirations require immediate assisted ventilation;
do not delay for pharmacologic intervention. Critical Care Principle: Ventilation takes
precedence over medication administration in respiratory arrest.




Question 4

A 68-year-old male presents with acute chest pain and diaphoresis. His initial vital
signs are: HR 110, BP 94/60, RR 24, SpO2 91% on room air. During the primary
survey, which component of the "C" (Circulation) assessment is most concerning?

A. Heart rate of 110 beats/minute
B. Blood pressure of 94/60 mmHg
C. Respiratory rate of 24 breaths/minute
D. Oxygen saturation of 91%

B. Blood pressure of 94/60 mmHg [CORRECT]

Rationale: SBP <90 mmHg defines hypotension and indicates shock—this is the
most concerning circulatory finding. Tachycardia (Option A) is compensatory but not
as immediately threatening as hypotension. Tachypnea (Option C) is a breathing
finding, not circulation. Hypoxemia (Option D) is also concerning but belongs to the
"B" assessment. The combination of hypotension + chest pain suggests cardiogenic
shock from acute MI. FCCS Competency: Circulatory assessment and shock
recognition. SCCM Guideline: SBP <90 mmHg or MAP <65 mmHg with signs of
hypoperfusion defines shock. Critical Care Principle: Hypotension is the hallmark of

, decompensated shock; tachycardia is compensatory and may be absent in
neurogenic or medication-related shock.




Question 5

During the disability (D) component of the primary survey, which assessment finding
indicates the most severe neurologic impairment?

A. Patient opens eyes to verbal command, is confused, and localizes pain (GCS 13)
B. Patient opens eyes to pain, makes incomprehensible sounds, and withdraws from
pain (GCS 8)
C. Patient has no eye opening, no verbal response, and decerebrate posturing (GCS
4)
D. Patient opens eyes spontaneously, is oriented, and follows commands (GCS 15)

C. Patient has no eye opening, no verbal response, and decerebrate posturing
(GCS 4) [CORRECT]

Rationale: GCS 4 indicates coma with severe brainstem dysfunction. Decerebrate
posturing (extensor response) indicates midbrain or upper pontine injury and carries
worse prognosis than decorticate (flexor) posturing. GCS ≤8 requires definitive
airway protection (intubation). Option A (GCS 13) is mild impairment. Option B (GCS
8) is coma requiring intubation but less severe than GCS 4. Option D (GCS 15) is
normal. FCCS Competency: GCS calculation and neurologic severity assessment.
SCCM Guideline: GCS ≤8 mandates intubation for airway protection; decerebrate
posturing indicates severe brainstem injury. Critical Care Principle: Lower GCS scores
correlate with higher mortality; decerebrate posturing indicates more severe injury
than decorticate.




Question 6

A trauma patient arrives with multiple injuries. During the "E" (Exposure) component,
the team removes all clothing. The patient is shivering and has cool extremities.
Which action is most appropriate?

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