NSG 3280 Exam 4 Questions and Answers Practice
||Verified Exam!!!||Questions with Solutions Newest |
Already Graded A+||Newest Exam!!!
The first choice of treatment for the management of
syphilis is:
a. penicillin G.
b. doxycycline.
c. antiviral agents.
d. antimicrobial agents. - Answer-a. penicillin G.
A 23-year-old male presents with urethritis, dysuria, and
purulent urethral discharge. The suspected diagnosis
would be:
a. gonorrhea.
b. urinary tract infection.
c. Chlamydia.
d. syphilis. - Answer-a. gonorrhea.
Transmission of Chlamydia during birth may result in -, or
infection of the eyes in the newborn.
,2|Page
a. neonatal jaundice
b. ophthalmia neonatorum
c. neonatal conjunctivitis
d. erythema neonatorum - Answer-b. ophthalmia
neonatorum
The Centers for Disease Control estimate that there are -
new sexually transmitted
infections every year.
a. 580,000
b. 1.7 million
c. 20 million
d. 17 billion - Answer-c. 20 million
The initial incubation period of syphilis lasts for -
a. 2-3 days
b. 10-90 days
c. 3-6 weeks
,3|Page
d. 40 years - Answer-b. 10-90 days
Herpes lesions are fluid-filled vesicles that appear - days
after infection.
a. 1 to 2
b. 3 to 7
c. 7 to 10
d. 10 to 14 - Answer-b. 3 to 7
The organism most commonly associated with pelvic
inflammatory disease is:
a. Neisseria gonorrhoeae.
b. Treponema pallidum.
c. Escherichia coli.
d. Pseudomonas. - Answer-a. Neisseria gonorrhoeae
A long asymptomatic latent phase is characteristic of
which of the following sexually transmitted infections?
a. Gonorrhea
, 4|Page
b. Syphilis
c. Chlamydia
d. Hepatitis B - Answer-b. Syphilis
A painless ulceration called a chancre is a lesion
associated with infection by:
a. human papillomavirus.
b. N. gonorrhoeae.
c. C. trachomatis.
d. T. pallidum. - Answer-d. T. pallidum.
Which infection can be a risk factor for cervical cancer?
a. Human papillomavirus
b. Molluscum contagiosum
c. Granuloma inguinale
d. Chancroid - Answer-a. Human papillomavirus
Which of the following infections is asymptomatic and self-
limited and does not require therapy?