Assessment Comprehensive Review | Q&A | Grade A | 100% Correct (Verified
Answers) – Chamberlain University
Subject: Advanced Health Assessment – Abdomen, Anus/Rectum/Prostate, Musculoskeletal, Nervous
System, Breast, Male/Female Genitalia, Obstetrics, Pediatrics, Geriatrics
Source: NR 509 Final Exam Study Guide / Chamberlain University / Bates' Guide to Physical Examination
(2026/2027 Update)
Format: Q&A Guide with Clinical Rationales | Grade A Guaranteed
1. Overweight 26-year-old with 12 hours of intense abdominal pain, light-headedness, fainting,
positive β-hCG, pulse 118, BP 86/68. Abdominal exam shows involuntary rigidity and rebound
tenderness. Most likely diagnosis?
Correct Answer: Ruptured tubal (ectopic) pregnancy
1. Positive pregnancy test with hemorrhagic shock (tachycardia, hypotension) and peritoneal
signs indicates ruptured ectopic pregnancy until proven otherwise.
2. Ectopic is a surgical emergency; history of missed period (10 weeks) and pain with
rebound/rigidity are classic.
2. 63-year-old with adenomatous polyps, elevated LFTs (AST, ALT, GGT, ALP, total bilirubin).
Which finding is most consistent with hepatomegaly?
Correct Answer: Liver palpable 3 cm below the right costal margin, midclavicular line, on expiration
1. Normal liver span: 6-12 cm at midclavicular line, 4-8 cm at midsternal line.
2. Liver palpable >2-3 cm below costal margin suggests hepatomegaly. Palpable liver edge on
expiration (when liver is highest) indicates enlargement.
3. 63-year-old underweight with 50-pack-year smoking history, epigastric pain, BP 148/92, BMI
17.6, prominent aorta concerning for AAA. Most significant risk factor?
Correct Answer: History of smoking
1. Smoking is the strongest modifiable risk factor for AAA, increasing risk 5-10 fold.
2. Age ≥65, male gender, family history, and hypertension are also risk factors, but smoking is
most significant in this patient.
4. 76-year-old with prior positive FOBT at 66, colonoscopy showed hemorrhoids and diverticuli, no
first-degree relatives with CRC. USPSTF screening recommendation?
Correct Answer: Do not screen routinely
1. USPSTF recommends stopping CRC screening at age 75 in average-risk patients with no prior
adenomas or cancer.
2. This patient had benign findings; no further screening indicated.
, 5. 31-year-old with 3-year history of recurrent crampy abdominal pain associated with constipation,
small hard stool, resolves with bowel movements. Most likely mechanism?
Correct Answer: Functional change in bowel movement
1. Symptoms meet Rome IV criteria for IBS with constipation (IBS-C).
2. IBS is a functional disorder with altered motility and sensitivity without identifiable organic
pathology.
6. 23-year-old with Kartagener syndrome (situs inversus). Which abdominal exam finding best fits?
Correct Answer: Tympany to percussion in the right upper quadrant, dullness to percussion of the left
upper quadrant
1. Situs inversus causes mirror-image organ placement: liver on left (dullness LUQ), stomach/gas
on right (tympany RUQ).
2. Normal findings are reversed; recognition prevents diagnostic confusion.
7. Physical exam finding that supports peritonitis?
Correct Answer: Pressing down onto the abdomen firmly and slowly and withdrawing the hand
quickly produces pain (rebound tenderness / Blumberg sign)
1. Rebound tenderness indicates peritoneal irritation and is highly suggestive of peritonitis.
2. Voluntary guarding is conscious; involuntary rigidity indicates peritoneal inflammation.
8. 58-year-old with diabetes, alcohol addiction (sober 10 months), epigastric pain radiating to back,
chronic diarrhea, weight loss. Mechanism of most likely diagnosis?
Correct Answer: Fibrosis of the pancreas (chronic pancreatitis)
1. Chronic pancreatitis from alcohol abuse causes malabsorption (diarrhea, weight loss) and
epigastric pain radiating to back.
2. Exocrine pancreatic insufficiency leads to steatorrhea; endocrine insufficiency leads to
diabetes.
9. Symptom most suggestive of biliary colic?
Correct Answer: Associated right shoulder pain (referred pain via phrenic nerve)
1. Biliary colic pain refers to right shoulder/scapula due to diaphragmatic irritation.
2. Pain occurs after fatty meals, lasts 1-6 hours, then resolves spontaneously.
10. True statement about muscle control of the anal sphincter?
Correct Answer: The internal anal sphincter is under involuntary control, whereas the external anal
sphincter is under voluntary control.
1. Internal sphincter is smooth muscle (involuntary, autonomic). External sphincter is striated
muscle (voluntary, somatic).
2. Fecal continence requires both intact.