2025-2026 Actual Exam 140 Questions With
100% Verified Correct Answers Guaranteed A+
Verified
○ Enteroviruses - non-polio - ANSWER--■ Ø10-15 serotypes account for most
diseases
■ ØMost common cause of aseptic meningitis
■ ØHand-foot-mouth, herpangina, acute hemorrhagic conjunctivitis, other
■ ØPrimary invasion through GI tract
■ ØTransmitted via respiratory route
■ ØTransplacental transmission can occur
■ ØInfants have highest prevalence rate
○ Enteroviruses - non-polio: clinical findings - ANSWER--■ ØHistory - mild URI;
nonspecific febrile illness >3 days; onset within 2 weeks after delivery
■ ØPhysical examination
● •Skin - macular, macular-papular, urticarial, vesicular, petechial
● •Herpangina - sudden onset of high fever; vesicular lesions on oropharynx,
palate
● •Acute lymphonodular pharyngitis
● •Hand-foot-mouth disease - vesicles
● •Aseptic meningitis - fever, stiff neck, headache
Enteroviruses - non-polio: clinical findings - ANSWER--■ ØDiagnostic studies - PCR
highly sensitive; cultures from throat, stool, CSF, blood
○ Enterovirus - poliomyelitis (fecal oral transmission) - ANSWER--
,FNP2 Exam 2 Blueprint GNRS 5670 Latest Update
2025-2026 Actual Exam 140 Questions With
100% Verified Correct Answers Guaranteed A+
Verified
○ Hep A - ANSWER--■ Good hand hygiene, esp after diaper changes
■ Fecal/oral transmission
■ Ig or HAV vaccine within 2 weeks of exposure
■ Good personal hygiene/safe drinking water (well water)
■ Routine HAV vaccine
■ ØCauses primary infection in liver
■ ØPerson-to-person; fecal-oral transmission
■ Ø<10% of young children develop jaundice; only 30% are symptomatic - allows
for rapid spread
■ ØClinical findings
● •Preicteric phase - acute febrile illness; malaise, nausea, anorexia, vomiting,
digestive complaints; may have RUQ pain
● •Icteric phase - jaundice, dark urine, clay-colored stools; feel sick; poor weight
gain in infants
■ ØFulminant disease rare; complete recovery in 1-2 months; occasional relapses
up to 6 months
■ ØDiagnostic studies - serologic testing
■ ØDifferential diagnosis
● •Infancy - physiologic jaundice, hemolytic disease, galactosemia,
hypothyroidism, biliary disorders, hypervitaminosis A
● •Older infants, children, adolescents - hemolytic-uremic syndrome, Reye
syndrome, others
■ ØManagement, complications, prevention
,FNP2 Exam 2 Blueprint GNRS 5670 Latest Update
2025-2026 Actual Exam 140 Questions With
100% Verified Correct Answers Guaranteed A+
Verified
● •Supportive care
● •Good hand hygiene, especially with diaper changes
● •Immunoglobulin or HAV vaccine within 2 weeks of exposure
● •Good personal hygiene; safe drinking water
● •Routine HAV vaccine
○ Hep B: - ANSWER--Perinatal transmission can occur
Hep C - ANSWER--Perinatal transmission major route for children
○ Herpes family of viruses - herpes simplex virus - ANSWER--■ Include HSV 1&2,
Mononucleosis (EBV), Roseola infantum, varicella
■ ØWidely disseminated in humans
● •HSV-1 - orolabial lesions
● •HSV-2 - genital lesions
■ ØBoth types associated with oral/genital infections
■ ØBoth types devastating to newborns
■ ØType 1 most common in children as gingivostomatitis
■ ØType 2 usually result of sexual activity
■ HSV1 (can give you a genital outbreak but does not like to live there)
■ Should child with HSV1 fever blister be kept out of school?
● No
, FNP2 Exam 2 Blueprint GNRS 5670 Latest Update
2025-2026 Actual Exam 140 Questions With
100% Verified Correct Answers Guaranteed A+
Verified
● Daycare drooling toddlers left out of daycare
● Wrestlers should not compete until lesions cleared
● Ask all pregnant women about HSV
■ Which is not true of HSV2: NOT most common as gingivostomatitis in children.
It is:
● Cause of genital lesions
● Usually result of sexual activity
● Devastating to newborns
○ Herpes family of viruses - herpes simplex virus (Cont.) - ANSWER--■ ØNeonatal
HSV-2 from mother during delivery
● •Conjunctivae, nose/mouth, broken skin
● •Can occur with C-section, asymptomatic shedding
■ ØPostnatal transmission, inoculation from fathers, lateral transmission from
other infants may occur
■ ØPeriod of communicability 2 days to 2 weeks
■ ØSome congenital infections occur >6 weeks
■ ØCan transmit from primary/recurrent infection
■ ØClinical findings - determined by port of entry, age, health, immune
competence
■ ØNeonatal infection - always symptomatic
● •Disseminated - multiple organ failure; encephalitis - day 10-12 of life