AMLS POST TEST EXAM Actual Exam 2026/2027
Complete Questions and Verified Answers with
Detailed Rationales Verified Solutions 100 out of 100
Graded A Pass Guaranteed - A+ Graded
SECTION 1: AMLS ASSESSMENT APPROACH
Q1: During the initial "across the room" assessment of a 45-year-old male in a restaurant, you
observe him sitting upright, leaning forward with hands on his knees, using neck muscles to
breathe, and hear audible wheezing from 10 feet away. His skin appears pale and diaphoretic.
Based on the AMLS triangle, which component is most concerning?
A. Appearance only
B. Work of breathing only
C. Circulation to skin only
D. Both work of breathing and circulation to skin [CORRECT]
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: The AMLS triangle consists of appearance (mental status/interaction), work of
breathing (positioning, retractions, audible sounds), and circulation to skin (color, moisture). This
patient demonstrates severe abnormalities in two components: tripod positioning with accessory
muscle use and audible wheezing (work of breathing), plus pallor and diaphoresis (circulation).
The combination suggests imminent respiratory failure requiring immediate intervention.
Q2: You arrive on scene to find a 68-year-old female lying on her kitchen floor. She responds to
verbal stimuli with confused speech. Her airway is patent, respirations are 24 and shallow, and
her radial pulse is weak and thready at 110 bpm. After completing the primary assessment, what
is your next priority step in the AMLS assessment pathway?
A. Obtain a detailed SAMPLE history
B. Perform a comprehensive secondary physical exam
C. Initiate immediate transport while beginning interventions [CORRECT]
D. Contact medical control for consultation
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: This patient has a compromised primary assessment (altered mental status,
tachypnea, weak rapid pulse), indicating life threats requiring immediate management. Per
,2
assessment-based management principles, life threats must be addressed first. While beginning
critical interventions (oxygen, IV access), immediate transport to definitive care is prioritized
over completing a secondary assessment in the field.
Q3: A 52-year-old male presents with chest pain. During your secondary assessment, you obtain
the following: BP 160/95, HR 98, RR 18, SpO2 96% on room air. He describes the pain as
"pressure" rated 7/10, radiating to his left arm, onset 30 minutes ago while at rest. He has a
history of hypertension and smoking. Using assessment-based management, which diagnosis
should be ranked as "cannot miss" in your differential?
A. Costochondritis
B. Gastroesophageal reflux disease
C. Acute coronary syndrome [CORRECT]
D. Anxiety disorder
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Assessment-based management requires prioritizing life-threatening conditions
("cannot miss" diagnoses) before considering benign causes. This patient's presentation
(pressure-like chest pain with radiation, diaphoretic appearance suggested by vitals, cardiac risk
factors) is classic for acute coronary syndrome. While costochondritis, GERD, and anxiety are
possible, ACS must be ruled out first due to time-critical nature of reperfusion therapy.
Q4: During scene size-up of a motor vehicle collision, you identify multiple patients, significant
vehicle damage with airbag deployment, and potential hazardous materials leaking from one
vehicle. According to AMLS principles, which element of the scene size-up takes immediate
precedence?
A. Determining mechanism of injury
B. Establishing scene safety [CORRECT]
C. Counting number of patients
D. Identifying available resources
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The AMLS assessment pathway begins with scene size-up, where scene safety is the
absolute first priority. No patient assessment or intervention should begin until the scene is
secured. Hazardous materials present an immediate threat to provider safety; appropriate PPE
and hazmat protocols must be established before patient contact.
, 3
Q5: A 34-year-old female presents with abdominal pain. Her vital signs are: BP 118/72, HR 88,
RR 16, SpO2 98%, temp 37.2°C. She appears comfortable, speaks in full sentences, and has
normal skin color. Her abdomen is soft and non-tender. Based on the general impression and
primary assessment, which transport decision is most appropriate?
A. Immediate lights-and-siren transport
B. Routine transport with continued monitoring [CORRECT]
C. Treat and release with primary care follow-up
D. Request air medical transport
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: This patient has a stable primary assessment with no immediate life threats identified.
The "across the room" assessment shows normal appearance, work of breathing, and circulation.
Vital signs are within normal limits. Per assessment-based management, stable patients without
life-threatening conditions can be transported routinely while continuing assessment en route.
However, EMS cannot "treat and release"—transport to appropriate care is required.
Q6: You are assessing a 71-year-old male with altered mental status. His wife states he became
confused over the past 6 hours. Using the SAMPLE mnemonic as part of your secondary
assessment, which information is most critical for determining the differential diagnosis?
A. His favorite foods
B. The color of his bedroom walls
C. His last oral intake and events leading to the episode [CORRECT]
D. His childhood medical history
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: SAMPLE (Signs/Symptoms, Allergies, Medications, Past medical history, Last oral
intake, Events leading up) guides focused history-taking. "Last oral intake" helps identify
hypoglycemia, poisoning, or metabolic causes; "Events leading up" provides crucial timeline and
context (stroke onset, trauma, infection progression). These elements directly inform the
differential diagnosis for altered mental status using the AEIOU TIPS framework.
Q7: During the primary assessment of a 28-year-old trauma patient, you identify an open airway,
rapid respirations at 32/min, and a weak radial pulse at 128 bpm. The patient is anxious and
confused. Which intervention sequence follows AMLS assessment-based management
principles?
A. Complete full secondary assessment before any interventions
B. Address life threats immediately while preparing for rapid transport [CORRECT]