All NCLEX-RN Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #871 : Nclex
You are a pulmonology nurse taking care of a patient who complains of episodic wheezing. You perform a diagnostic test in which you perform pulmonary function tests on the patient before, and after administering albuterol, a beta-2 adrenergic agonist. You note that the patient's symptoms and FEV1 readings improve drastically with bronchodilator administration. Based upon these findings, the patient most likely has which of the following?
Lung Cancer
Sarcoidosis
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Throat Cancer
Asthma
Asthma
The correct answer is "Asthma." This answer is correct because asthma is an inflammatory airway condition that is characteristically improved symptomatically and quantitatively (in terms of pulmonary function tests, including FEV1 readings) with bronchodilator administration (e.g. albuterol, the beta-2 adrenergic agonist administered in this patient). In this patient who presented for evaluation of wheezing, a characteristic symptom of asthma, his substantial response to bronchodilator administration makes the likelihood of an asthma diagnosis very high.
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is an obstructive physiology of the airways often due to chronic tobacco smoking. While bronchodilators may be of some clinical value in these patients, their FEV1 readings characteristically do not correct after bronchodilator administration, as this is a major method in which COPD can be distinguished from asthma and other inflammatory airway conditions.
Sarcoidosis, lung cancer, and throat cancer symptoms would not necessarily improve with bronchodilator administration, nor would pulmonary function test readings in patients with these conditions.
Example Question #877 : Nclex
A 45-year old obese male with a history of obstructive sleep apnea, hypertension, diabetes, and coronary artery disease presents to your primary care clinic for help in managing his fatigue due to his sleep apnea. He is not a candidate for tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy. Which of the following interventions would be the best recommendation to treat his obstructive sleep apnea?
Insulin
Tamsulosin
Metoprolol
Metformin
Continuous positive airway pressure mask (CPAP)
Continuous positive airway pressure mask (CPAP)
The correct answer is "continuous positive airway pressure mask (CPAP)." This is the correct answer as a CPAP mask helps to force airway into the lungs that is otherwise obstructed by the patient's oropharyngeal anatomy at standard breathing pressures due to obstructive sleep apnea. When wearing a CPAP mask (typically when sleeping), snoring is reduced, and oxygenation is improved, allowing patients to have a more restful sleep and feel less fatigued the following day.
While medications like metoprolol, insulin, and metformin may be beneficial to the patient in treating his conditions co-morbid to obstructive sleep apnea, they do not have a direct effect on treating his sleep apnea or the resultant fatigue.
Tamsulosin is an alpha-adrenergic blocker and can be used to treat benign prostatic hyperplasia among other conditions, but not obstructive sleep apnea.
Example Question #71 : Conditions And Treatments
Example Question #72 : Conditions And Treatments
A 63 year old female client is newly admitted to the hospital for pneumococcal pneumonia. The nurse recognizes that this patient will most likely exhibit certain symptoms associated with this condition.
Which clinical findings are most commonly consistent with pneumococcal pneumonia?
Dry cough with fatigue, nausea and vomiting.
Slow onset of cough, nasal congestion, sore throat, and fever.
Sudden onset of fever, chills, with a productive cough with rust colored sputum.
Fever, chills, and a non-productive cough.
Headache, muscle aches, and a cough with frothy pink sputum.
Sudden onset of fever, chills, with a productive cough with rust colored sputum.
Pneumococcal (bacterial) pneumonia typically presents with an abrupt onset of fever, shaking chills, and a productive cough (usually rust in color). Usually viral pneumonias will present with a dry non productive cough and associated with other viral infections.
Example Question #1 : Respiratory Condition Follow Up
What population is most at risk during pertussis infection?
Pregnant women
Adolescents
Elderly
Infants
Infants
Due to their susceptibility to suffocation, infants are more at risk of mortality than older children, pregnant women, or the elderly during pertussis infection. Mortality in infants with this condition can be as high as 2%. There is also an increase in infant co-moridities such as pneumonia, encephalopathy, seizures, and failure to thrive.
Example Question #2 : Respiratory Condition Follow Up
You are the nurse taking care of a 78-year old man with a 60 pack-year smoking history who is hospitalized for shortness of breath. You review the x-ray and notice a 1-cm solitary pulmonary nodule within the middle lobe of the right lung. Which of the following is the most appropriate next step?
Refer the patient for surgical excision of the nodule
Attempt to obtain and review a prior x-ray
Administer radiotherapy to the pulmonary nodule
Arrange for biopsy of the nodule
Administer chemotherapy
Attempt to obtain and review a prior x-ray
The correct answer is "Attempt to obtain and review a prior x-ray." This is the correct answer because while the patient appears to have a very concerning story for a primary lung neoplasm given his age and smoking history, or a metastasis from another neoplasm, if this nodule was noted on a prior x-ray, especially a much older x-ray, and is unchanged, then the degree of concern about the nodule is much lower, given its stability over time. On the contrary, if you can obtain a recent prior x-ray and the nodule is not present on that scan, or has grown since that scan, then the level of concern about the nodule should be greater, and should guide clinical decision-making as such.
Measures such as biopsy, surgery, chemotherapy, or radiotherapy administration are all possible future steps if indeed this pulmonary nodule turns out to be a malignant neoplasm. That being said, there is no definite evidence at this time that the patient's nodule is of malignant origin, and should this nodule be something that has been stable on prior x-rays for multiple years, then the level of concern should be far lower, and the need for more invasive measures would be obviated.
Example Question #72 : Conditions And Treatments
Which of the following terms describes the congenital abnormality of the forebrain in which an infant is born with a diminished brain size?
Anencephaly
Microcephaly
Agyri
Polymicrogyri
Microcephaly
Microcephaly denotes a congenital abnormality of the forebrain in which an infant is born with a diminished brain size. Potential causes include fetal alcohol syndrome, congenital rubella, and trisomy 18.
The other answers are all examples of congenital forebrain birth defects:
- Anencephaly is the complete absence of major portions of the brain, skull, and scalp.
- Agyri is the absence of gyri.
- Polymicrogyri is a condition in which gyri are too many, too small, and very shallow.
Example Question #73 : Conditions And Treatments
Anencephaly and other neural tube defects have been linked to maternal deficiency of what nutrient?
Folate
Beta carotene
Biotin
Calcium
Folate
Anencephaly and other neural tube defects have been linked to maternal deficiency of folate. This is most likely due to folate's role in methylation and nucleic acid synthesis. The other nutrients listed are all important to maternal health but have no known correlation with neural tube defects such as anencephaly.
Example Question #2 : Identifying Pediatric Conditions
Periventricular leukomalacia (PVL) is the most common finding on autopsy of newborns with what condition?
Anencephaly
Cerebral palsy
Hypoxia
Fetal alcohol syndrome
Cerebral palsy
Periventricular leukomalacia is the most common finding on autopsy of newborns with cerebral palsy. PVL involves the softening of the brain tissue and subsequent death of the white matter. This is caused by lack of blood flow to the periventricular area of the brain, which results in necrosis and gliosis of brain tissue. Neonates born with PVL are likely to have mental impairment, motor disorders, and compromised vision and hearing. PVL is usually diagnosed with ultrasound of the head. None of the other conditions listed typically present with this finding.
Example Question #2 : Identifying Pediatric Conditions
A mother one hour post birth expresses concern because her baby's head looks slightly cone shaped. The nurse tells the mother that __________.
this is normal but is not temporary
this is abnormal and she should contact her pediatrician
this is abnormal and she should consult a neurologist
this is normal and usually temporary
this is abnormal but does not require immediate medical intervention
this is normal and usually temporary
It is normal for a child's head to be slightly misshapen immediately following birth. The infant's skull is composed of bony plates connected by membranes (fontanelles), allowing for accommodation of the baby's growing brain. Caput succedaneum (swelling of the scalp) can also be found following a long delivery. A misshapen head usually resolves on its own and is normal but does not require any medical intervention.