Vati Green Light Comprehensive Form A, B,
C 2026/2027 Newest Actual Exam 3 Versions
Complete 300 Questions And Correct
Answers (Verified Answers) || Complete A+
Guide
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Version Section Topic Areas Questions
Form A Section 1 Medical-Surgical Nursing 1-25
Section 2 Pharmacology 26-45
Section 3 Fundamentals of Nursing 46-65
Section 4 Mental Health Nursing 66-85
Maternal-Newborn
Section 5 86-100
Nursing
Form B Section 6 Pediatric Nursing 101-125
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Version Section Topic Areas Questions
Section 7 Critical Care Nursing 126-145
Section 8 Leadership & Management 146-165
Section 9 Community Health 166-185
Section
Gerontological Nursing 186-200
10
Complex Health
Form C Section 11 201-225
Alterations
Section 12 Pharmacology II 226-245
Section 13 Emergency Nursing 246-265
Section
Prioritization & Delegation 266-285
14
Section 15 Professional Issues 286-300
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FORM A
SECTION 1: MEDICAL-SURGICAL NURSING (Questions 1-25)
QUESTION 1
A nurse is assessing a client who has heart failure and is taking
furosemide. Which of the following findings indicates the
medication is effective?
A) Decreased peripheral edema
B) Increased blood pressure
C) Increased urinary specific gravity
D) Decreased heart rate
Answer: A) Decreased peripheral edema
Rationale: Furosemide is a loop diuretic that reduces fluid
volume overload in heart failure. Decreased peripheral
edema indicates effective diuresis and fluid removal from
interstitial spaces. Increased BP is not a direct indicator of
furosemide effectiveness. Urinary specific gravity would
decrease, not increase, with effective diuresis. Heart rate
changes are not a direct measure of diuretic effectiveness.
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QUESTION 2
A client with type 1 diabetes mellitus has a blood glucose level of
320 mg/dL and large ketones in the urine. Which of the following
actions should the nurse take first?
A) Administer regular insulin IV
B) Administer 0.9% sodium chloride IV
C) Check serum potassium level
D) Obtain an arterial blood gas
Answer: B) Administer 0.9% sodium chloride IV
Rationale: In diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA), the priority
intervention is fluid resuscitation with IV 0.9% sodium
chloride to correct dehydration and improve tissue
perfusion. Insulin administration follows fluid resuscitation.
Potassium levels should be monitored after fluid and insulin
therapy. ABG is important but not the first action.
QUESTION 3
A nurse is assessing a client who has pneumonia. Which of the
following findings should the nurse expect?