APEA Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse
Practitioner PMHNP Exam Actual Exam
2026/2027 – Complete Exam-Style
Questions with Detailed Rationales | Pass
Guaranteed – A+ Graded
[SECTION 1: ASSESSMENT & DIAGNOSIS (DSM-5-TR) — Questions 1-35]
Q1: A 45-year-old patient presents with a persistent fear of gaining weight despite being
significantly underweight (BMI of 16.5). She reports an intense fear of becoming fat and engages
in restrictive eating behaviors. During the interview, she demonstrates a disturbance in the way
her body weight or shape is experienced. Which DSM-5-TR diagnosis best fits this clinical
presentation?
A. Bulimia Nervosa
B. Anorexia Nervosa
C. Binge-Eating Disorder
D. Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID)
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Anorexia Nervosa is characterized by restriction of energy intake leading to
significantly low body weight, intense fear of weight gain, and disturbance in self-perceived
body shape or weight. Bulimia Nervosa involves binge eating with compensatory behaviors but
typically occurs at normal weight. Binge-Eating Disorder involves bingeing without
compensatory behaviors. ARFID involves avoidance/restriction of food intake but is not related
to body image disturbance or fear of weight gain.
Q2: During a Mental Status Exam (MSE), a patient demonstrates "flight of ideas." Which
specific descriptor of speech best defines this phenomenon?
A. Slow, delayed, and decreased production of speech.
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B. Accelerated speech with rapid shifting from one topic to another based on understandable
associations.
C. Speech that is illogical and lacks meaningful connection between concepts.
D. Repetitive persistence of a particular thought or response.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Flight of ideas is a derailment of thought process characterized by rapid, continuous
verbalization with abrupt topic shifts, often based on understandable associations (rhyming,
puns), typical of mania. A describes bradylalia or retardation. C describes word salad
(incoherence). D describes perseveration.
Q3: A 28-year-old male reports hearing voices commenting on his behavior and conversing with
each other. He has no active mood symptoms and has been experiencing these symptoms for 8
months with declining occupational functioning. There is no history of drug use. What is the
most appropriate diagnosis?
A. Brief Psychotic Disorder
B. Schizoaffective Disorder
C. Schizophrenia
D. Schizotypal Personality Disorder
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Schizophrenia requires two or more psychotic symptoms (e.g., hallucinations,
delusions) for a significant portion of time during a 1-month period, with continuous signs of
disturbance persisting for at least 6 months. Brief psychotic disorder lasts less than 1 month.
Schizoaffective disorder requires a major mood episode concurrent with the psychotic
symptoms. Schizotypal is a personality disorder characterized by odd beliefs and magical
thinking, not full psychotic episodes.
Q4: When assessing a patient for suicide risk using the Columbia-Suicide Severity Rating Scale
(C-SSRS), which question is most critical for determining "Suicidal Ideation"?
A. "Have you ever made a suicide attempt?"
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B. "Have you ever wished you were dead or wished you could go to sleep and not wake up?"
C. "Have you been feeling hopeless about the future?"
D. "Do you have a family history of suicide?"
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The C-SSRS specifically assesses for the presence of "wish to be dead" or "suicidal
thoughts" as the threshold for suicidal ideation. Option A assesses lifetime attempts (behavior).
Option C is a risk factor (hopelessness) but not a direct assessment of ideation on the scale.
Option D is a risk factor, not a symptom assessment.
Q5: A 7-year-old child is evaluated for inattention. The teacher reports the child frequently
makes careless mistakes, loses school supplies, and seems not to listen when spoken to directly.
Symptoms are present in both the classroom and at home. According to DSM-5-TR, what is the
earliest age by which symptoms of ADHD must be present to make the diagnosis?
A. 3 years
B. 5 years
C. 7 years
D. 12 years
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: DSM-5-TR requires that several symptoms be present prior to age 12 years for a
diagnosis of ADHD. Previous editions required onset before age 7, but this was revised to age 12
to capture late-onset presentations more accurately while still distinguishing it from adult-onset
disorders.
Q6: A patient presents with recurrent, unexpected panic attacks followed by persistent worry
about having another attack or maladaptive changes in behavior to avoid them for the past 3
months. Which diagnosis is indicated?
A. Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD)
B. Social Anxiety Disorder
C. Panic Disorder
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D. Agoraphobia
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Panic Disorder is defined by recurrent unexpected panic attacks and at least one
month of persistent worry about additional attacks or significant maladaptive behavioral changes
related to the attacks. GAD involves excessive worry about various life events, not specifically
panic attacks. Agoraphobia involves fear of situations where escape might be difficult.
Q7: Which cognitive screening tool is most sensitive for detecting Mild Cognitive Impairment
(MCI) and early dementia, particularly for vascular etiology or executive dysfunction?
A. Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE)
B. Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA)
C. Clock Drawing Test
D. Mini-Cog
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The MoCA is more sensitive than the MMSE for detecting Mild Cognitive
Impairment and early dementia, particularly in cases involving executive dysfunction and
vascular pathology. The MMSE is better for moderate-to-severe dementia. The Clock Drawing
Test and Mini-Cog are brief screening tools but lack the comprehensive assessment of the MoCA
for MCI.
Q8: A patient describes a specific event where they felt detached from their body, as if watching
themselves in a movie. They feel reality is unreal but remain oriented. There is no history of
substance use. Which disorder best describes this?
A. Dissociative Amnesia
B. Depersonalization/Derealization Disorder
C. Dissociative Identity Disorder
D. Schizophrenia