ATI LPN
Questions for the Respiratory System Questions
Question 1 of 5
Simple pulmonary eosinophilia
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Simple pulmonary eosinophilia (Loffler syndrome) has striking radiographs but a benign course (D), resolving spontaneously. Choice A is false; acute eosinophilic pneumonia responds to corticosteroids, not antibiotics. Choice B is incorrect; Loffler is benign, not fatal. Choice C is wrong; it's extrinsic (allergic), not intrinsic. Choice E (giant cells) is true. Page 740 confirms D's profile transient infiltrates and eosinophilia contrast with A's treatment or B's severity error.
Question 2 of 5
The incidence of lung cancer
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Lung cancer incidence exceeds breast cancer in women (B), reflecting smoking trends. Choice A is false; it's increasing slowly in women. Choice C is incorrect; peak is 40-70, not seventies. Choice D is wrong; only 2% occur before 40. Choice E (1990s smoking link) is misstated. Page 757 confirms B's epidemiology women's rising rates surpass breast cancer, unlike A's decline or D's percentage error.
Question 3 of 5
Which of the following does not involve a bacterial exotoxin?
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Exotoxins are potent proteins secreted by bacteria, driving diseases like diphtheria (Corynebacterium diphtheriae), where toxin inhibits protein synthesis; whooping cough (Bordetella pertussis), with pertussis toxin disrupting cell signaling; and scarlet fever (Streptococcus pyogenes), via erythrogenic toxins causing rash. Q fever, caused by Coxiella burnetii, lacks a classic exotoxin instead, its intracellular survival and lipopolysaccharide-like effects drive symptoms like fever and pneumonia. Unlike exotoxin-mediated diseases, Q fever's pathology stems from replication within host cells, not secreted toxins. This distinction matters in treatment: antitoxins target exotoxins, but Q fever relies on antibiotics like doxycycline, highlighting diverse bacterial virulence strategies in respiratory infections.
Question 4 of 5
Which of the following is not caused by a dimorphic fungus?
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Dimorphic fungi switch between yeast and mold forms, causing systemic infections. Histoplasmosis (Histoplasma capsulatum), coccidioidomycosis (Coccidioides spp.), and blastomycosis (Blastomyces dermatitidis) are dimorphic, inhaled as spores, then yeast in tissue, affecting lungs and beyond. Aspergillosis, from Aspergillus spp., isn't dimorphic it's a mold-only opportunist, infecting immunocompromised lungs without yeast transition. This distinction guides diagnosis: dimorphic fungi need tissue biopsy showing yeast, while Aspergillus shows hyphae. Treatment varies amphotericin B for systemic dimorphic infections versus voriconazole for Aspergillus highlighting aspergillosis's unique pathology in respiratory fungal disease classification.
Question 5 of 5
The nurse is providing a 68-year-old client with health promotion activities. Which vaccine will the nurse recommend for the prevention of bacterial pneumonia?
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Pneumococcal vaccine (D) prevents bacterial pneumonia, targeting Streptococcus pneumoniae, per CDC for ages 65+. Meningococcal vaccine (A) prevents meningitis, not pneumonia. Flu vaccine (B) reduces viral pneumonia risk but not bacterial directly. TDAP (C) addresses pertussis, not S. pneumoniae. The document's answer (D) fits PCV13/PCV15 protects against 70% of invasive pneumococcal disease in the elderly, unlike A's focus or B's indirect effect.