EDUCATION ADMISSIONS | 2024/2025 PRACTICE TEST
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS 100% PASS.
INTRODUCTION
This comprehensive DAT Final Exam Practice Test is designed to prepare dental students, dental
hygiene candidates, and DAT examinees for success on the Dental Admission Test and related dental
education examinations. Based on the 2024/2025 ADA testing standards and current dental education
curriculum requirements, this 150-question examination covers six critical domains: infection control
and occupational safety, microbiology and infectious diseases, head and neck anatomy, oral pathology
and dental sciences, physiology and body systems, and nutrition and biochemistry. Each question
includes detailed rationales grounded in dental science standards, OSHA guidelines, and clinical best
practices to ensure thorough understanding of both theoretical concepts and practical applications
essential for modern dental practice.
DOMAIN 1: INFECTION CONTROL & OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY (Questions 1-25)
Question 1: The greatest occupational risks for exposure to hepatitis B virus include blood and
saliva contamination of cuts on ungloved hands, spraying onto mucous membranes, and:
• A. Direct patient contact without a mask
• B. Through injuries with contaminated sharps [CORRECT]
• C. Airborne transmission from coughing patients
• D. Contact with contaminated dental unit waterlines
Rationale: Percutaneous injuries with contaminated sharps represent the third major route of
occupational HBV exposure in dental settings, following direct contamination of broken skin and
mucous membrane splashes, per OSHA bloodborne pathogens standards.
Question 2: A vaccine is available for which of the following types of hepatitis?
• A. Hepatitis A and B [CORRECT]
• B. Hepatitis C and D
, • C. Hepatitis E only
• D. All types of hepatitis
Rationale: Safe and effective vaccines are available for hepatitis A and hepatitis B. No vaccines
currently exist for hepatitis C, D, or E, making prevention through standard precautions essential
for these infections.
Question 3: Most healthcare workers who have occupationally acquired HIV infection from
infected patients had what type of exposure?
• A. Ingestion of contaminated saliva
• B. Through the skin (percutaneous injury) [CORRECT]
• C. Casual contact with patients
• D. Airborne droplet exposure
Rationale: Occupational HIV transmission requires exposure to infectious blood or body fluids
through percutaneous injury (needlestick, sharp object), mucous membrane exposure, or non-
intact skin contact. Percutaneous injuries carry the highest transmission risk (approximately 0.3%
per exposure).
Question 4: Which form of hepatitis is transmitted through contaminated food or water?
• A. Hepatitis A [CORRECT]
• B. Hepatitis B
• C. Hepatitis C
• D. Hepatitis D
Rationale: Hepatitis A is transmitted through the fecal-oral route via contaminated food, water, or
close personal contact. It is not bloodborne like hepatitis B, C, and D, making vaccination and hand
hygiene critical prevention measures.
Question 5: How long can the hepatitis C virus in blood dried on an inanimate surface remain
infectious?
• A. Up to 24 hours
, • B. Up to 3 days
• C. Up to 6 weeks [CORRECT]
• D. Up to 6 months
Rationale: Hepatitis C virus in dried blood can remain infectious for up to 6 weeks on
environmental surfaces, significantly longer than HIV (hours to days). This environmental stability
necessitates rigorous surface disinfection and prompt cleaning of blood spills.
Question 6: Which disease presents the highest risk to dental personnel?
• A. Hepatitis A
• B. Hepatitis B [CORRECT]
• C. Hepatitis C
• D. HIV
Rationale: Hepatitis B presents the highest occupational risk to dental personnel due to its high
viral load in blood, environmental stability (surviving 7+ days), high infectivity, and historically
high transmission rates in healthcare settings before vaccination and standard precautions.
Question 7: Which of the forms of hepatitis is spread through fecal-oral contamination?
• A. Hepatitis B and C
• B. Hepatitis A and E [CORRECT]
• C. Hepatitis D only
• D. Hepatitis C and D
Rationale: Hepatitis A and E are enteric viruses transmitted through fecal-oral contamination,
typically via contaminated water or food in areas with poor sanitation. Hepatitis B, C, and D are
bloodborne pathogens requiring blood or body fluid exposure for transmission.
Question 8: What disease can be prevented by immunization?
• A. Hepatitis C
• B. Hepatitis D
, • C. Hepatitis B [CORRECT]
• D. All forms of hepatitis
Rationale: Hepatitis B is preventable through a safe, effective recombinant vaccine series (typically
3 doses). OSHA mandates hepatitis B vaccination or signed declination for all dental personnel with
occupational exposure risk. No vaccines exist for hepatitis C or D.
Question 9: How are bacterial spores important in dental infection control?
• A. They are the primary cause of dental caries
• B. They are used to test the functioning and use of sterilizers [CORRECT]
• C. They indicate proper hand hygiene technique
• D. They demonstrate waterline contamination
Rationale: Bacterial spores (particularly Geobacillus stearothermophilus for steam sterilizers and
Bacillus atrophaeus for dry heat) serve as biological indicators to validate sterilizer function. Their
destruction confirms that sterilization parameters (time, temperature, pressure) were adequate to
kill all microbial life.
Question 10: Sterilization of contaminated dental instruments before they are used on a
subsequent patient interferes with which link in the chain of infection?
• A. Infectious agent
• B. Reservoir
• C. Mode of spread [CORRECT]
• D. Susceptible host
Rationale: Sterilization interrupts the mode of spread (transmission) by eliminating infectious
agents on fomites (contaminated instruments). Breaking any link in the chain of infection
(infectious agent, reservoir, portal of exit, mode of transmission, portal of entry, susceptible host)
prevents disease transmission.
Question 11: The mode of microbe transmission that involves small droplet nuclei such as those
generated from dental aerosols is called:
• A. Airborne infection [CORRECT]