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Comprehensive ARRT Mock Registry 2026 Exam: COMPREHENSIVE FINAL PREP: VERIFIED QUESTIONS & EXPERT ANSWERS ULTIMATE EXAM PASS PACK – LATEST 2026/2027 UPDATES

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Question 1: Post-Processing and Digital Masking If a radiographic image is produced of a patient's body part and the radiographer did not collimate as closely as would be preferred prior to the exposure, the radiographer should do which of the following during post-processing of the image? • A. Use digital masking (shuttering) on the image prior to sending it to the radiologist. • B. Leave all exposed areas of anatomy visible on the image sent to the radiologist. • C. Repeat the projection with optimal collimation, then submit it to the radiologist. • D. Use the smoothing function to eliminate scatter fog in the image prior to submitting it to the radiologist. Correct Answer: B Rationale: • B is correct: It is a vital professional standard to leave all exposed areas visible on the final transmitted image. Using digital masking (shuttering) to artificially crop out uncollimated areas is an unethical practice because it can obscure anatomy that received primary radiation, potentially hiding pathology or foreign bodies from the interpreting radiologist. • A is incorrect: Digital masking should only be used to eliminate distracting background veil glare from unexposed areas, never to hide anatomy that was exposed due to poor collimation. • C is incorrect: Repeating an exposure solely because the collimation was too wide violates the ALARA (As Low As Reasonably Achievable) principle, as it delivers unnecessary duplicate radiation dose to the patient. • D is incorrect: The smoothing function is a spatial frequency filter used to reduce the appearance of digital quantum mottle (noise); it does not remove scatter radiation fog. Question 2: Legal Doctrines in Malpractice Which of the following is a legal doctrine that may apply in a medical malpractice case in which negligence would be obvious to any reasonable person? • A. Respondeat superior • B. Tort • C. Res ipsa loquitur • D. Attribution Correct Answer: C Rationale: • C is correct: Res ipsa loquitur is a Latin phrase meaning "the thing speaks for itself." This legal doctrine applies in cases where the injury or negligence is completely obvious to a layperson without requiring expert testimony (for example, a surgical instrument left inside a patient's abdomen or a surgical procedure performed on the wrong limb). • A is incorrect: Respondeat superior ("let the master answer") dictates that an employer or hospital can be held legally liable for the negligent actions of their employees while working within their scope of employment. • B is incorrect: A tort is a broad legal category denoting a civil wrong—either intentional or unintentional (negligence)—that causes injury or harm to another person. • D is incorrect: Attribution is not a primary legal doctrine used in medical malpractice litigation. Question 3: Ownership of Radiographic Medical Records Images recorded as part of a radiographic exam are legally a part of the patient's medical record and are the property of what individual or entity? • A. The patient • B. The institution in which they are performed • C. The interpreting radiologist • D. The ordering physician Correct Answer: B Rationale: • B is correct: Legally, the physical or digital radiographic images belong entirely to the healthcare institution or facility that generated them. However, patients retain a legal right to access, view, and request official copies of these records under health privacy laws (such as HIPAA). • A is incorrect: While patients own the rights to the medical information contained within the record, they do not own the actual proprietary imaging files or films. • C and D are incorrect: Neither the radiologist who interprets the film nor the physician who ordered the exam holds individual legal ownership of the diagnostic images. Question 4: Kubler-Ross Stages of Grieving Which of the following statements is true about the five stages of grieving, as described by Dr. Elisabeth Kübler-Ross? • A. The five stages generally occur in order. • B. When a person is in the denial stage, medical professionals should try to overcome the denial by stating the truth. • C. During the anger stage, it is possible that the person will take out anger on family or healthcare professionals. • D. Each person dealing with grief will experience all five stages at some point during the grieving process. Correct Answer: C Rationale: • C is correct: During the anger stage of grief, individuals often direct their overwhelming frustration, helplessness, and rage outward. It is common for these feelings to be targeted randomly at close family members or accessible healthcare professionals. • A is incorrect: Grieving is non-linear. The stages do not happen in a strict sequential or chronological order; individuals frequently jump back and forth between stages. • B is incorrect: Forcing a patient out of the denial stage is non-therapeutic. Denial is a protective defense mechanism, and professionals should meet the patient with support rather than aggressive confrontation. • D is incorrect: Not every individual experiences all five stages (Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression, Acceptance); some may skip stages entirely or remain fixed in one. Question 5: Therapeutic Nonverbal Communication Which of the following is an example of therapeutic nonverbal communication between a radiographer and a patient? • A. Radiographer stands with arms crossed while gathering patient history. • B. Radiographer tells the patient that he or she will feel no pain during the procedure but does not return the patient's eye contact. • C. The radiographic room is neat and organized. • D. The radiographer hugs the patient at the end of the exam because she seems anxious. Correct Answer: C Rationale: • C is correct: A clean, organized, and structurally sound workspace communicates competency, safety, professionalism, and care nonverbally. It helps establish patient trust and reduces situational anxiety before the procedure even begins. • A is incorrect: Standing with crossed arms is a negative or defensive nonverbal posture that signals disinterest or emotional detachment. • B is incorrect: Avoiding direct eye contact nonverbally signals dishonesty, discomfort, or evasiveness, which undermines verbal reassurance. • D is incorrect: Hugging an anxious patient can violate personal and professional boundaries, and is not a universally accepted standard for clinical communication. Question 6: Patient Transfer with Suspected Spinal Injury You and one assistant receive an average-sized female patient on a gurney with a possible spinal injury. You must transfer her to the exam table to complete her imaging exams. Which would be the best choice of transfer methods in this situation? • A. Sliding or "smoothie" board • B. Log roll method • C. Sheet transfer • D. Allow the patient to move herself if she is able Correct Answer: A Rationale: • A is correct: A rigid plastic sliding or "smoothie" board is the optimal device for this transfer because it keeps the spinal column aligned in a flat, neutral plane. It bridges the gap between the gurney and the table, allowing the patient to be moved with minimal torso manipulation. • B is incorrect: While a log roll is used to turn a patient to look behind them or to place a slide board underneath them, it is not a direct horizontal transfer method from a gurney to a table. • C is incorrect: A basic sheet transfer lacks rigid physical support, increasing the risk of the patient's torso sagging or flexing mid-transfer, which could worsen a spinal cord injury. • D is incorrect: Patients with a suspected or unruled-out spinal injury must remain fully immobilized and must never be permitted to exert force or attempt to selftransfer. Question 7: Blunt Chest Trauma Pathologies Which of the following terms is used to describe a condition that can result from blunt trauma to the chest, in which the heart is bruised and can hemorrhage into the pericardium and prevent expansion of the heart? • A. Hematoma • B. Myocardial infarction • C. Hemothorax • D. Cardiac tamponade Correct Answer: D Rationale: • D is correct: Cardiac tamponade is a life-threatening medical emergency where blood or fluid rapidly accumulates inside the rigid pericardial sac surrounding the heart. The resulting fluid pressure compresses the heart chambers, severely restricting ventricular filling and reducing cardiac output. • A is incorrect: A hematoma is a localized collection of blood outside the blood vessels, usually in soft tissues. • B is incorrect: A myocardial infarction (heart attack) refers to myocardial tissue necrosis caused by localized ischemia, typically due to coronary artery occlusion rather than external blunt trauma bleeding. • C is incorrect: A hemothorax is a collection of blood within the pleural cavity surrounding the lungs, not the pericardial sac of the heart. Question 8: Seizure Classification The following symptoms are characteristic of what type of seizure? Symptoms: rigid muscles and arching of back, jerky and irregular body movements, possible vomiting, froth or bloodstreaked saliva from the mouth, urinary or fecal incontinence. • A. Generalized • B. Complex Partial • C. Simple Partial • D. Syncope Correct Answer: A Rationale: • A is correct: These classic presentation steps (specifically the progression through rigid tonic phases and convulsive clonic muscle movements, along with loss of sphincter control) define a generalized tonic-clonic seizure, which involves widespread electrical disturbances across both hemispheres of the brain. • B and C are incorrect: Partial (focal) seizures originate in a localized zone of one cerebral hemisphere. Simple partial seizures do not alter consciousness, while complex partial seizures involve impaired consciousness or automatisms, but neither produces full-body convulsive tonic-clonic episodes. • D is incorrect: Syncope is a temporary loss of consciousness caused by transient cerebral hypoperfusion (fainting) and does not involve rigid tonic posturing or violent convulsive movements. Question 9: Chain of Infection and Transmission Routes If a disease-causing microorganism is transmitted from one patient to another by means of an improperly cleaned instrument, the means of transmission is: • A. Indirect contact • B. Direct contact • C. Vehicle • D. Vector • E. Droplet contact Correct Answer: A Rationale: • A is correct: Indirect contact transmission occurs when a susceptible host makes contact with a contaminated inanimate object (fomite), such as an improperly disinfected imaging receptor, surgical tool, or needle. • B is incorrect: Direct contact transmission requires immediate physical skin-to-skin contact between an infected person and a susceptible host. • C is incorrect: A vehicle refers to contaminated media that transmits disease on a wide scale to multiple people, such as public water supplies, food batches, or commercial blood products. • D is incorrect: A vector transmission involves a living organism (typically an arthropod like a mosquito, tick, or flea) that carries and transmits the infectious pathogen. • E is incorrect: Droplet contact occurs when large respiratory particles travel through the air from a cough or sneeze and land directly on a host's mucous membranes. Question 10: Droplet Isolation Distance How far can pathogenic organisms that are transmitted by droplet travel? • A. 2 feet • B. 3 feet • C. 5 feet • D. 10 feet Correct Answer: B Rationale: • B is correct: Large respiratory droplets generated during coughing, sneezing, or talking are relatively heavy and generally travel through the air a maximum distance of 3 feet before gravity pulls them down onto surrounding surfaces. This 3-foot radius defines the essential boundary for wearing standard surgical masks during droplet isolation protocols. • A, C, and D are incorrect: These distances do not align with standard infection control guidelines for respiratory droplet thresholds. Smaller particles that travel much further (past 3 to 6 feet) fall under airborne isolation precautions. Question 11: Routes of Drug Administration The intrathecal route of drug administration falls into which category of administration? • A. Enteral • B. Topical • C. Parenteral • D. Intravenous Correct Answer: C Rationale: • C is correct: Parenteral administration includes any route of drug delivery that bypasses the gastrointestinal tract, typically involving an injection directly into body tissues or spaces. Because an intrathecal injection delivers medications directly into the subarachnoid space of the spinal canal, it is classified as a specialized parenteral route. • A is incorrect: The enteral route utilizes the digestive tract and includes oral (PO), sublingual, and rectal delivery methods. • B is incorrect: Topical routes apply medications directly to external body surfaces like the skin or mucous membranes for localized effects. • D is incorrect: An intravenous (IV) route is a specific type of parenteral administration that targets veins, whereas intrathecal targets the spinal meninges.

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yy


Comprehensive ARRT Mock Registry 2026 Exam:
COMPREHENSIVE FINAL PREP: VERIFIED
QUESTIONS & EXPERT ANSWERS ULTIMATE EXAM
PASS PACK – LATEST 2026/2027 UPDATES

Question 1: Post-Processing and Digital Masking

If a radiographic image is produced of a patient's body part and the radiographer did not
collimate as closely as would be preferred prior to the exposure, the radiographer should do
which of the following during post-processing of the image?

• A. Use digital masking (shuttering) on the image prior to sending it to the radiologist.

• B. Leave all exposed areas of anatomy visible on the image sent to the radiologist.

• C. Repeat the projection with optimal collimation, then submit it to the radiologist.

• D. Use the smoothing function to eliminate scatter fog in the image prior to
submitting it to the radiologist.

Correct Answer: B

Rationale:

• B is correct: It is a vital professional standard to leave all exposed areas visible on the
final transmitted image. Using digital masking (shuttering) to artificially crop out
uncollimated areas is an unethical practice because it can obscure anatomy that
received primary radiation, potentially hiding pathology or foreign bodies from the
interpreting radiologist.

• A is incorrect: Digital masking should only be used to eliminate distracting
background veil glare from unexposed areas, never to hide anatomy that was
exposed due to poor collimation.

• C is incorrect: Repeating an exposure solely because the collimation was too wide
violates the ALARA (As Low As Reasonably Achievable) principle, as it delivers
unnecessary duplicate radiation dose to the patient.

• D is incorrect: The smoothing function is a spatial frequency filter used to reduce the
appearance of digital quantum mottle (noise); it does not remove scatter radiation
fog.

Question 2: Legal Doctrines in Malpractice

,yy


Which of the following is a legal doctrine that may apply in a medical malpractice case in
which negligence would be obvious to any reasonable person?

• A. Respondeat superior

• B. Tort

• C. Res ipsa loquitur

• D. Attribution

Correct Answer: C

Rationale:

• C is correct: Res ipsa loquitur is a Latin phrase meaning "the thing speaks for itself."
This legal doctrine applies in cases where the injury or negligence is completely
obvious to a layperson without requiring expert testimony (for example, a surgical
instrument left inside a patient's abdomen or a surgical procedure performed on the
wrong limb).

• A is incorrect: Respondeat superior ("let the master answer") dictates that an
employer or hospital can be held legally liable for the negligent actions of their
employees while working within their scope of employment.

• B is incorrect: A tort is a broad legal category denoting a civil wrong—either
intentional or unintentional (negligence)—that causes injury or harm to another
person.

• D is incorrect: Attribution is not a primary legal doctrine used in medical malpractice
litigation.

Question 3: Ownership of Radiographic Medical Records

Images recorded as part of a radiographic exam are legally a part of the patient's medical
record and are the property of what individual or entity?

• A. The patient

• B. The institution in which they are performed

• C. The interpreting radiologist

• D. The ordering physician

Correct Answer: B

Rationale:

• B is correct: Legally, the physical or digital radiographic images belong entirely to the
healthcare institution or facility that generated them. However, patients retain a legal

,yy


right to access, view, and request official copies of these records under health privacy
laws (such as HIPAA).

• A is incorrect: While patients own the rights to the medical information contained
within the record, they do not own the actual proprietary imaging files or films.

• C and D are incorrect: Neither the radiologist who interprets the film nor the
physician who ordered the exam holds individual legal ownership of the diagnostic
images.

Question 4: Kubler-Ross Stages of Grieving

Which of the following statements is true about the five stages of grieving, as described by
Dr. Elisabeth Kübler-Ross?

• A. The five stages generally occur in order.

• B. When a person is in the denial stage, medical professionals should try to overcome
the denial by stating the truth.

• C. During the anger stage, it is possible that the person will take out anger on family
or healthcare professionals.

• D. Each person dealing with grief will experience all five stages at some point during
the grieving process.

Correct Answer: C

Rationale:

• C is correct: During the anger stage of grief, individuals often direct their
overwhelming frustration, helplessness, and rage outward. It is common for these
feelings to be targeted randomly at close family members or accessible healthcare
professionals.

• A is incorrect: Grieving is non-linear. The stages do not happen in a strict sequential
or chronological order; individuals frequently jump back and forth between stages.

• B is incorrect: Forcing a patient out of the denial stage is non-therapeutic. Denial is a
protective defense mechanism, and professionals should meet the patient with
support rather than aggressive confrontation.

• D is incorrect: Not every individual experiences all five stages (Denial, Anger,
Bargaining, Depression, Acceptance); some may skip stages entirely or remain fixed in
one.

Question 5: Therapeutic Nonverbal Communication

Which of the following is an example of therapeutic nonverbal communication between a
radiographer and a patient?

, yy


• A. Radiographer stands with arms crossed while gathering patient history.

• B. Radiographer tells the patient that he or she will feel no pain during the procedure
but does not return the patient's eye contact.

• C. The radiographic room is neat and organized.

• D. The radiographer hugs the patient at the end of the exam because she seems
anxious.

Correct Answer: C

Rationale:

• C is correct: A clean, organized, and structurally sound workspace communicates
competency, safety, professionalism, and care nonverbally. It helps establish patient
trust and reduces situational anxiety before the procedure even begins.

• A is incorrect: Standing with crossed arms is a negative or defensive nonverbal
posture that signals disinterest or emotional detachment.

• B is incorrect: Avoiding direct eye contact nonverbally signals dishonesty, discomfort,
or evasiveness, which undermines verbal reassurance.

• D is incorrect: Hugging an anxious patient can violate personal and professional
boundaries, and is not a universally accepted standard for clinical communication.

Question 6: Patient Transfer with Suspected Spinal Injury

You and one assistant receive an average-sized female patient on a gurney with a possible
spinal injury. You must transfer her to the exam table to complete her imaging exams. Which
would be the best choice of transfer methods in this situation?

• A. Sliding or "smoothie" board

• B. Log roll method

• C. Sheet transfer

• D. Allow the patient to move herself if she is able

Correct Answer: A

Rationale:

• A is correct: A rigid plastic sliding or "smoothie" board is the optimal device for this
transfer because it keeps the spinal column aligned in a flat, neutral plane. It bridges
the gap between the gurney and the table, allowing the patient to be moved with
minimal torso manipulation.

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