Question 1
P. E. is a 61-year-old female who presents for a postoperative visit following a gastric resection
after a perforation of peptic ulcer. She reports feeling better, although it is taking longer than she
expected. However, she says she is feeling better each day, her appetite is returning, and her
incision is healing well. She is being discharged from surgical care and advised to continue her
routine health promotion follow-up with her primary care provider. As part of her surgical
discharge teaching, the AGACNP counsels P. E. that as a result of her gastric resection she will
need lifelong follow-up of:
A. Blood group substances
B. Electrolytes
C. Vitamin B12
D. Gastric pH
Question 2
M. T. is a 71-year-old female who presents for evaluation of a ―lump on her chest.‖ She denies
any symptoms—there is no pain, erythema, edema, ecchymosis, or open areas—it is just a lump.
She has no idea how long it has been there and just noticed it a few weeks ago. Physical
examination reveals a round, smooth, flesh-colored tumor. It is firm but not hard; it has smooth
borders. It measures 6 cm in diameter and is non-tender to palpation. The AGACNP suspects
, that this is a classic presentation of the most common chest wall tumor known as a:
A. Neurolemma
B. Lipoma
C. Hemangioma
D. Lymphangioma
Question 3
The AGACNP is receiving report from the recovery room on a patient who just had surgical
resection for pheochromocytoma. He knows that which class of drugs should be available
immediately to manage hypertensive crisis, a possible consequence of physical manipulation of
the adrenal medulla?
A. Alpha-adrenergic antagonists
B. Beta-adrenergic antagonists
C. Intravenous vasodilators
D. Arteriolar dilators
Question 4
A patient with suspected Cushing’s syndrome is being evaluated to establish the diagnosis
and cause. Patients with an adrenal tumor typically will demonstrate:
A. Low ACTH and low cortisol
B. Low ACTH and high cortisol