and Rationales 2026
This comprehensive test bank is designed to prepare candidates for the Wound
Care Certification (WCC) examination. Questions cover wound assessment,
treatment modalities, dressing selection, infection control, pressure injury
staging, and evidence-based practice guidelines .
Section 1: Wound Assessment & Documentation (Questions 1-25)
Question 1: How would the WOC nurse document a skin injury present on each
buttock at the site where the buttocks touch each other?
A. Intertriginous dermatitis (ITD)
B. Incontinence-associated dermatitis (IAD)
C. Moisture-related pressure injury
D. Stage 2 pressure injury
Answer: A
Rationale: Intertriginous dermatitis presents as "kissing lesions" or mirror-image
skin damage in skin folds such as the gluteal cleft. These injuries occur in areas
prone to moisture and are not typically over bony prominences, distinguishing
them from pressure injuries .
,Question 2: Normal capillary refill time is:
A. Less than 1 second
B. 3 seconds
C. 5-7 seconds
D. 10 seconds
Answer: B
Rationale: Normal capillary refill is 3 seconds. Prolonged refill (>3 seconds)
indicates potential arterial insufficiency or peripheral vascular disease .
Question 3: The major subjective data points gathered during a wound
assessment include all of the following EXCEPT:
A. Wound pain rating
B. Wound odor reported by patient
C. Wound bed tissue type
D. Impact on activities of daily living
,Answer: C
Rationale: Wound bed tissue type is objective data obtained through physical
examination. Pain rating, reported odor, and functional impact are subjective data
provided by the patient .
Question 4: Which term accurately describes the existence of the least harmful
levels of bacteria within a wound?
A. Colonization
B. Contamination
C. Critical colonization
D. Infection
Answer: B
Rationale: Contamination represents the lowest level of wound bioburden—
presence of non-replicating organisms on the wound surface without causing
harm. Colonization involves replicating organisms without host response; critical
colonization impairs healing; infection involves host response and tissue invasion .
Question 5: Order the following in order of increasing wound bioburden (least to
most):
, A. Contamination → Colonization → Critical colonization → Infection
B. Colonization → Contamination → Infection → Critical colonization
C. Contamination → Critical colonization → Colonization → Infection
D. Colonization → Contamination → Critical colonization → Infection
Answer: A
Rationale: The progression of wound bioburden is: Contamination (non-
replicating organisms) → Colonization (replicating, no host response) → Critical
colonization (impaired healing) → Infection (host response and tissue invasion) .
Question 6: A full-thickness wound involves which of the following tissue layers?
A. Epidermis only
B. Epidermis and dermis
C. Epidermis, dermis, and subcutaneous tissue
D. Dermis only
Answer: C