NURS 6670 FINAL EXAM LATEST UPDATES WITH DEFINATIONS 75/75 (WU)
DEFINATIONS:
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1. Narcolepsy:
2. Kleene-Levin syndrome
3. Paraphilia
4. Vascular dementia
5. Paradoxical insomnia
6. Catatonia:
Types of catatonia
I. A kinetic catatonia
II. Excited catatonia
III. Malignant catatonia
7. Psychodynamic Theories
8. Circadian rhythm sleep disorder
9. Korsakoff syndrome
10. Loss of ego boundaries
11. Androgen insensitivity syndrome
12. Hyper orality and declining hygiene
13. Sleep onset REM period
Q U E S T I O N 1
Collette is a 23-year-old female who presented for emergency care with her mother because her behavior has become increasingly erratic and caused her to lose her job. Her mother reports that she had never done anything like this in the past, but about 3 months ago, her boyfriend of 3 years broke up with her, and Collette began to express unrealistic beliefs that her boyfriend wanted to drive her crazy and hurt her. A gentleman trying to hail a taxi accidentally bumped into her this morning, and she started screaming that her ex-boyfriend had hired the man to throw her into the street under a car. Collette is on a 2-week suspension from her job as a restaurant server because she was combative to a customer— she accused him of colluding with her ex-boyfriend to get her fired. After this morning's incident, her mother was so worried she brought her to the emergency room. Her appearance is disheveled; she is clearly hyper alert and is crying that her boyfriend must have converted her mother to work against her. Head imaging, screening lab, and a toxicology screen are negative. A leading differential for Collette is:
-Bipolar disorder
-Acute psychotic episode
-Schizophreniform disorder
-Post-traumatic stress disorder
Q U E S T I O N 2
Jake and Laurie are a young married couple who have been referred to mental health counseling because Jake is having disturbing sleep events. Laurie reports that on more than one occasion she has awakened to find Jake having what appears to be a panic attack, but he doesn't seem to realize it. When he finally wakes up, he is confused and doesn't really understand what happened, although he does have a sense of intense fear. This has happened twice in the last 2 weeks, and the last time Laurie heard him screaming. Jake is now a bit afraid to go to sleep and as a result does not feel well the next day. The PMHNP recognizes that sleep terrors in adults:
-Are often associated with trauma or psychiatric problems
-Represent a disorder of REM sleep
-May be a symptom of temporal lobe epilepsy
-Is treated with a cycle of sleep deprivation
Q U E S T I O N 3
Jack is a 27-year-old male who has a history of paranoid schizophrenia that first became apparent approximately 10 years ago. He developed paranoid delusions and eventually decompensated to the point that he required inpatient stabilization. At the time, he was started on conventional antipsychotics, but due to intolerable adverse effects he was switched to haloperidol. It worked well, but whenever he stopped taking it, symptoms would recur. After several hospitalizations, he was stabilized. The neurophysiologic theory of schizophrenia suggests that Jack's symptoms were a result of:
-Increased dopamine activity in the mesolimbic pathway
-Increased dopamine activity in the mesocortical pathway
-Increased glutamate in the prefrontal cortex
-Increased glutamate in the hippocampus
Q U E S T I O N 4
Johanne is a 22-year-old female who is being treated for narcolepsy. She is attempting to implement a regimen of forced daytime naps in an effort to manage her condition without pharmacotherapy as she is generally averse to taking medications. While following Johanne, the PMHNP should be alert to signs and symptoms of
-Suicidality
-Depression
-Hyperphagia
-Disinhibition
Q U E S T I O N 5
The PMHNP is asked to prepare a presentation for non-nursing health care workers in a local long-term care facility on the various causes of cognitive impairment in the elderly. A case presentation approach is used to reinforce principles of identifying delirium, which needs to be reported to the patient's attending provider right away. The case should emphasize which of the following features as being closely correlated with delirium?
-Perceptual disturbances
-Rapid onset
-Agitation
-Abnormal sleep patterns
Q U E S T I O N 6
Valerie is a 27-year-old woman who has been referred by her primary care provider. She was initially diagnosed with major depressive episode following a breakup with her boyfriend of 7 years. They moved into a house together 1 year ago, but within a few months the boyfriend moved out. Valerie was unresponsive to medication for depression and was referred to the mental health clinic. During this initial psychiatric evaluation, the PMHNP learns that a primary reason for the breakup was that Valerie had an extensive routine every night of repeatedly checking every door and window in the home to ensure that they were locked. Valerie's nighttime routine is exhaustive and involves checking every door and window at least four times. She has a remote history of being attacked in her home while alone and states that she is unable to go to bed until she is certain that every door and window is locked. When considering diagnostic criteria for OCD, the PMHNP needs further assessment to ascertain which diagnostic criteria?
-The patient has tried unsuccessfully to suppress the urge to repeatedly check locks
-The compulsive activities are time-consuming to the extent that at least 1 hour daily is spent on them
-The disturbance is not better explained as the symptoms of another mental disorder
-The patient has good or fair insight with respect to the appropriateness of her behaviors
Q U E S T I O N 7
Michael is an 18-year-old male who is presented to care at the urging of his parents. He has never had any significant medical or psychiatric problems in the past, but during his first semester at college he has developed a very alarming pattern of excess sleep. He is missing classes and is in danger of losing a scholarship. He is sleeping normally at night but apparently is having these very long episodes of napping and sleeping during the day. When he is awake, he tends to be rather withdrawn. His parents have taken him to their family practitioner as they thought he might be using drugs. A full exam, laboratory assessment, and toxicology screen are all normal, and there is no apparent cause for this sleepiness. While very rare, the PMHNP considers Kleine-Levin syndrome and further assesses for coincident onset of:
-Narcolepsy
-Mood disorder
-Hyper sexuality
-Alcohol
Q U E S T I O N 8
The primary differentiating feature between mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer's dementia is:
-The presence of the apolipoprotein E4 gene
-Performance on objective neuropsychiatric testing
-Presence or absence of functional impairment
-Atrophy of the hippocampal volume
Q U E S T I O N 9
Physiologic assessment of patients with paraphilia’s has demonstrated that most them have:
-Abnormal hormone levels
-Hard or soft neurological signs
-Chromosomal abnormalities
-Electroencephalogram (EEG) abnormalities
Q U E S T I O N 10
Donna is a 41-year-old woman who is being evaluated at the request of her primary care provider for obsessive compulsive disorder. Which of the following aspects of Donna's family medical history should prompt an immediate referral to a neurologist?
-Father committed suicide at age 38
-Mother died from Huntington’s chorea
-Sister has temporal lobe epilepsy
-Brother has profound eczema
Q U E S T I O N 11
With respect to the treatment of obsessive compulsive disorder, which of the following statements best characterizes the role of psychotherapy?
-Best treatment outcomes occur when patients combine psychotherapy with pharmacotherapy
-Psychotherapy is superior to behavior therapy as a nonpharmacological adjunct to medications
-Psychodynamic exploration of a patient’s resistance to treatment may improve compliance to therapy
-There is no apparent benefit to psychotherapy in the management of obsessive compulsive disorder
Q U E S T I O N 12
Jamal is a 31-year-old male who is being evaluated by the PMHNP as part of required care following a suicide attempt. He has never had mental health care before, but his history reveals a significant history of substance abuse. Upon further assessment, Jamal reveals that the reason he uses drugs and alcohol is that he becomes most aroused sexually when he dresses in women's clothing. He is distressed by this. He says he is attracted to women, he is not gay, but he is just most aroused in this way. He admits that even when he was little, he was always drawn to his mother's and sister's clothing and underwear. Jamal's condition is best characterized as
-Gender dysphoria
-Intersex condition
-Sexual identity disorder
-Paraphilia
Q U E S T I O N 13
The primary difference between sleepwalking and rapid eye movement behavior disorder (RBD) is that:
-Sleepwalkers do not have REM-mediated paralysis
-Sleepwalkers are acting on the dream imagery
-RBD patients do not respond to pharmacotherapy
-RBD may be due to a variety of brain abnormalities
Q U E S T I O N 14
The PMHNP is preparing a community-based presentation for both the staff and residents of a local life-care facility. The facility offers a continuum of care from independent apartment living to assisted living to nursing home care. In an effort to increase awareness of signs and symptoms of dementia as compared to pseudo dementia, the management has contracted with the PMHNP to prepare these informative educational programs. When comparing and contrasting these two conditions, the PMHNP emphasizes that in pseudo dementia the patient is usually:
-Very aware of the dysfunction
-Afflicted by poor attention and concentration
-Good at concealing disability
-Joyful at accomplishing tasks
Q U E S T I O N 15
Several medical disorders can produce symptoms of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Which of the following findings in a patient with new onset OCD should prompt an evaluation for a neurologic cause of symptoms?
-Family history of neurological disease
-Poorly controlled hypertension
-Age 40 at presentation
-Lack of response to SSRIs
Q U E S T I O N 16
Which of the following is a true statement with respect to obsessive-compulsive disorder?
-Most clinical drug trials support the hypothesis that dysregulation of the serotonergic system is involved in symptom formation
-Between 50 and 75% of patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) had premorbid obsessive-compulsive personality disorder (OCPD)
-Behavioral theory suggests that development of obsessive thoughts and compulsive behaviors are a result of respondent conditioning
-Most affected individuals are diagnosed between the ages of 25 and 40
Q U E S T I O N 17
Joyce is a 30-year-old female patient who was recently diagnosed with schizophrenia after being referred for mental health evaluation by the police. She demonstrated paranoid delusions that ultimately led to such disruptive behavior at her place of work that the police were called. Her husband was able to provide a history consistent with prodromal symptoms, and in retrospect her disorganized thought and poor insight were evident over the last few months. She was initially stabilized on IM Zyprexa (olanzapine) and has been maintained on oral Zyprexa for the last 2 weeks, and has been on 10 mg daily for 1 week. Today at follow-up she demonstrates mild improvement. Her hygiene and appearance are much improved. She is still hearing voices and has delusions that communists are trying to infiltrate the company for which she works. She is open to the idea that these are delusions but still seems hesitant to accept that premise. At this point her medication management should include:
-Obtaining an olanzapine level
-Increasing the dose of Zyprexa
-Cross titrate another antipsychotic
-Add a mood stabilizer
Q U E S T I O N 18
Recurrent isolated sleep paralysis is characterized by the awareness of normal Remediated paralysis in the partially conscious state. It is a feature of normal REM sleep, and lifetime occurrence is estimated to be as high as 50%. While counseling patients about this condition, the PMHNP correctly states all the following except:
-First-line therapy includes ensuring adequate sleep
-Shift work can increase the likelihood that this occurs
-People experience this should not be touched
-It is among the tetrad of narcolepsy symptoms
Q U E S T I O N 19
A wide variety of sleep-wake disorders are referred to the PMHNP for assessment and management. A contemporary approach to managing insomnia centers around:
-Diagnosing and managing underlying causation
-Providing relief and managing symptoms
-Focusing on nonpharmacological therapies
-Differentiating “tiredness” from “sleepiness”
Q U E S T I O N 20
Trudy is a 49-year-old woman recently diagnosed with schizophrenia. While she has a strong family history of mood disorders, and has herself evidenced some depressive symptoms by history, her delusions and diagnosis of schizophrenia were a big surprise to herself and her family. She has been married for 25 years and by all accounts has had a successful marriage and family life until the last few months when she became increasingly concerned that her best friend was trying to seduce her husband. Further history suggests that she has paranoid delusions and that her memos from work carried messages that her coworkers were trying to destroy her family. Trudy was finally referred for care when she tried to attack a coworker. There is no apparent precipitating factor, and her family cannot understand why she is just now demonstrating symptoms of schizophrenia. Now that she is in treatment, which elements of her history support a good prognosis?
-Lack of precipitating factors
-Neurological signs
-Physical assault
-Age of onset
Q U E S T I O N 21
Shireen is a 21-year-old transgender female who has been through an exhaustive counseling program and is ready to start hormone therapy with estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone-blocking agents. When counseling her specifically about the risks, benefits, and required monitoring of hormonal therapy, the PMHNP advises Shireen that:
-Her ability to conceive will not be adversely impacted
-There is a significant risk of developing benign prolactinomas
-Smoking cigarettes while on estrogen therapy increases risk of thrombosis
-If breast augmentation is planned, it should be performed prior to hormone therapy
Q U E S T I O N 22
John is a 20-year-old male who is referred to treatment by his father. The two of them live together following the murder of John's mother 6 weeks ago. It was a tragic occurrence; John's mother was a nurse at an inner-city hospital and was killed as an innocent bystander in a drive-by shooting. John was very close to his mother, and in the last 3 weeks he has been increasingly distraught. His dad says he did not cope well from the beginning, but for the last 2 weeks he has been agitated, combative, and is hearing voices telling him that he could have saved his mother. He has become so agitated that his father brought him to the emergency room. The PMHNP knows that immediate treatment for John should include:
-Electroconvulsive therapy
-IM antipsychotics
-Benzodiazepines
-Antidepressants
Q U E S T I O N 23
Gerry is a 24-year-old male who is being evaluated for obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). He has a long history of both obsessive thoughts and compulsive behaviors going back into mid-adolescence. When evaluating his history, the PMHNP knows that all of the following are more common in patients with OCD except
-Celibacy
-Tourette’s disorder
-Marital discord
-Obsessive-compulsive personality disorder
Q U E S T I O N 24
Schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, and schizophreniform disorder are all among the continuum of psychiatric illnesses characterized by psychotic episodes. Which of the following clusters of features best distinguishes schizophreniform disorder?
-prod Rome of negative symptoms, duration > 1 month, early age of onset
-Absence of mood disorder, two or more psychotic symptoms, duration > 6 months
-Progressive decline in social and occupational function, insidious onset, complete resolution of symptoms
-Rapid and acute onset, return to baseline in < 6 months, occurs in adolescents and young adults
Q U E S T I O N 25
Danny is a 19-year-old male who presents to the college mental health center at the insistence of his roommate. Danny has developed what his roommate calls an obsession with cleanliness. He showers several times a day and changes his clothes easily four or five times. He also brushes his teeth every couple of hours, convinced that he has bad breath. During the interview, it does not appear that these are anxiety-reducing rituals but rather he is certain that he has unpleasant body odors and needs to keep showering and brushing his teeth to get rid of them. While considering a diagnosis of obsessive-compulsive disorder, the PMHNP considers that differential diagnoses for Danny include all the following except:
-Olfactory reference syndrome
-Obsessive compulsive personality disorder
-Temporal lobe epilepsy
-Sinus inflammation
Q U E S T I O N 26
Sarah is a 52-year-old female who is referred to psychiatric care by her primary care provider. Sarah clearly does not feel that the evaluation is necessary and indicates that she has essentially been "blackmailed" by her long-time primary care provider who says he will no longer see Sarah until she has a mental health assessment. The referring PCP reports that Sarah is convinced that she has a cancer that he cannot diagnose. Sarah's mother, brother, and sister all died from various cancers, and Sarah has become convinced that she has one too, although no one can find it. A genetic evaluation indicates no genetic or familial risk. Sarah has had a thorough physical examination; been screened for colorectal, breast, and cervical cancer; and has also had CT scans of the head and chest; the last two at her request as her mother and brother had brain and lung cancer, respectively. Sarah has no specific symptoms but is fixed in the belief that she has cancer that no one can find. When considering a diagnosis of delusional disorder, the PMHNP would expect Sarah's evaluation to reveal:
-Mental status examination is normal
-Hallucinations consistent with occult cancer
-A willingness to consider objective evidence that her belief is unrealistic
-Family history of psychotic or mood disorder
Q U E S T I O N 27
Obsessive compulsive disorder is characterized by variable success to treatment, presenting on a bell-curve continuum. Twenty to 30% of patients have significant improvement, 40- 50% have moderate improvement, and 20-40% remain ill or even develop worsening symptoms. Which of the following is best correlated with the most optimistic treatment outcomes?
-Childhood onset
-Yielding to compulsions
-Precipitating event
-Some acceptance of symptoms
Q U E S T I O N 28
Which of the following infectious diseases associated with psychiatric symptoms is most likely to present with olfactory and gustatory hallucinations, psychosis, personality changes, and partial seizures?
-Rabies encephalitis
-Neurosyphilis
-Lyme disease
-Herpes simplex encephalitis
Q U E S T I O N 29
Ron D. is a 67-year-old man who has been referred by his primary care provider for management of sleep disorder. He has seen his PCP many times complaining of insomnia. He reports that he lays in bed for "hours" every night before falling asleep and then often wakes up every 90 minutes, sometimes staying awake for more than an hour before he goes back to sleep. He has been trialed on both zolpidem (Ambien) and zaleplon (Sonata) without improvement. Polysomnography did not support the pattern of sleep described by Ron D. During his sleep study, he reported the same complaints; while the objective test results indicated that he fell asleep in < 15 minutes with a total sleep time > 7 hours and 93% sleep efficiency. This is known as
-Psychophysiological insomnia
-Conditioned insomnia
-Paradoxical insomnia
-Idiopathic insomnia
Q U E S T I O N 30
A secondary prevention strategy to reduce the incidence of pedophilia includes:
-Participating in community awareness programs and promoting identification of sexual offenders in the neighborhood
-Designing a screening tool to identify children 13 years of age and younger at high risk for being targeted by pedophiles
-Volunteering one afternoon a week to counsel in a comprehensive center for children who have been victimized
-Researching strategies to promote best long-term success treatment modalities
Q U E S T I O N 31
Mrs. Swenson is a 71-year-old patient who has been referred to mental health services for evaluation and management of dementia. She recognized her own cognitive deficits and discussed them with her primary care provider, who advised that she seek specialty care. After performing a comprehensive assessment, the PMHNP diagnoses the patient with vascular dementia. While reviewing her medication list from the PCP, the PMHNP recognizes that which of the following medications may be contributing to Mrs. Swenson's cognitive impairment?
-Metformin (Glucophage)
-Clopidogrel (Plavix)
-Metoprolol (Lopressor)
-Lisinopril (Lotensin)
Q U E S T I O N 32
What is the primary difference between sexual interest and arousal disorders in men and women?
-Unlike men, women may not feel interest or desire until after arousal
-The disorder rarely occurs in older men but is common in older women
-Symptoms occur more commonly due to hormone deficiencies in men
-Duration of symptoms to support diagnosis is longer in women
Q U E S T I O N 33
The clinical evaluation of neurocognitive disease includes a detailed assessment of cognition. Which of the following aspects of cognitive testing may result in false positives due to poor education or low intelligence?
-Memory
-Visuospatial ability
-Reading and writing ability
-Abstraction
Q U E S T I O N 34
Maryanne is a 26-year-old female who is in therapy for obsessive compulsive disorder. She was trialed on SSRI therapy without remission and was changed to clomipramine, 25 mg q.h.s. titrated up to 100 mg q.h.s. 2 weeks ago. She presents today for follow up. The PMHNP assesses for which of the following adverse effects?
-Diarrhea
-Bradycardia
-Sedation
-Urinary incontinence
Q U E S T I O N 35
All of the following strategies are used successfully to manage paradoxical insomnia except:
-Cognitive relabeling
-Diffusing sleep worry
-Anxiolytics
-Changing environment
Q U E S T I O N 36
The PMHNP is preparing a presentation for a primary care conference. The topic is "Recognizing Schizophrenia: Common Signs and Symptoms Encountered by the Primary Care Provider." A critical point to stress to primary care clinicians is that:
-Olfactory and gustatory hallucinations are unusual and should prompt evaluation for a neurological disorder
-A praecox feeling as correlated with a diagnosis of schizophrenia has a demonstrated sensitivity of 83%
-Disorders of thought content are pathognomonic for schizophrenia and are an indication to begin antipsychotics
-Premorbid and prodromal signs and symptoms have a high predictive validity and should prompt a psychiatric referral
Q U E S T I O N 37
The PMHNP is formulating a diagnosis for Peter, a 24-year-old man who was admitted for management of acute psychoses. He believed that he was the Holy Ghost of the Christian Trinity. According to his mother and father, he did not have any psychiatric symptoms or history throughout childhood and adolescence, but after college, he began to develop "issues" characterized by extremes of mood in which he would be too depressed to attend classes for weeks at a time followed by a rebound in which he would go partying, stay awake for days at a time, and go on ridiculous shopping sprees. When considering a diagnosis of schizoaffective disorder, the PMHNP attempts to establish that:
-His religious delusions are of at least 4 weeks’ duration and have produced social or occupational impairment
-The delusions at some point have occurred for 2 weeks absent a major mood episode
-Symptoms respond favorably to a combination of antipsychotic medications and mood stabilizers
-There is evidence of premorbid or prodromal symptoms prior to the psychotic episode
Q U E S T I O N 38
Catatonia is an uncommon finding most often related to
-Schizophrenia
-Major depressive episode
-General medical condition
-Parkinsonism
Q U E S T I O N 39
Luz is a 24-year-old female who is being evaluated at the strong urging or her mother and the family primary care provider. According to the mother, Luz has been progressively demonstrating obsessive thoughts and compulsive behaviors centering on religion. She is preoccupied with the concept of heaven and hell, and she often becomes very distressed that she is going to go to hell when she dies. The mother also reports that Luz appears to be compulsive about reading her Bible and performing prayers and other rituals several times a day. The PMHNP must perform a detailed history and examination to differentiate obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) from:
-Obsessive compulsive personality disorder
-Psychosis
-Depression
-Schizoid personality disorder
Q U E S T I O N 40
Dual-sex therapy is a therapeutic approach to sexual dysfunction in a marital dyad or relationship that is believed to result from disharmony or misunderstanding in the relationship. This is most effective in couples when:
-The therapeutic team takes the lead in directing activities
-There is no other psychopathology in either partner
-Individual therapy for the partner with the dysfunction is unsuccessful
-Each partner comes to therapy with an open mind to sexual play
Q U E S T I O N 41
John is a 19-year-old male who is self-referred for care after being prematurely discharged from the military. He is vague as to the details of his discharge, but it appears he had difficulty with performance evaluations and was apparently arrested for several incidences of illegal substance abuse. Comprehensive evaluation of John reveals that he thinks he "is really a woman," but he cannot accept this and joined the Army to try and "be a real man." John indicates that he has always felt like he was really a girl, and he says that he "hates that he has a penis." When considering a diagnosis of gender dysphoria, the PMHNP knows that which of the following would be most consistent with John's history?
-He is only sexually attracted to men
-He has a desire for gender reassignment surgery
-Cross-gender behavior was evident before puberty
-John is unable to obtain an erection with partners of either gender
Q U E S T I O N 42
Kasey is a 26-year-old male who is referred for emergency psychiatric evaluation in the local community emergency room. His girlfriend came home from work unexpectedly and found him in the bathtub with multiple longitudinal cuts on both wrists. She called 911 and he was stabilized in the ED; the injuries were not serious, and now he is pending psychiatric evaluation. When the PMHNP came into the room, he noticed that Kasey unbuttoned and rebut toned his shirt four times before settling down to the interview. He presented as depressed and tearful, and admitted to feelings of hopelessness and worthlessness. He admits that he doesn't really feel connected to anyone; he has always been a loner, and last night he tried to kill himself because life just was not worth living. In addition to his suicidal ideation, the PMHNP recognizes that he needs to be further evaluated for:
-Major depressive episode and obsessive- compulsive disorder
-Bipolar disorder with psychotic features
-Dysthymia and borderline personality disorder
-Obsessive compulsive disorder and schizoid personality disorder
Q U E S T I O N 43
Jack is a 19-year-old male who is being treated for obsessive-compulsive behavior. He has just begun his mission as a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, and his partner has encouraged him to come to care due to his compulsive cleaning behaviors. Jack has had a very difficult time with treatment; after several sessions, it is apparent that he is having obsessive sexual thoughts with which he is not comfortable. Jack would like to avoid pharmacotherapy if he can, and is interested in exploring psychotherapeutic interventions. The PMHNP refers Jack to therapy and discusses with him that the psychodynamic theories of OCD include:
-Intolerance of the nuclear family to compulsive rituals
-The drive to seek secondary gain because of compulsive behavior
-Abnormalities related to the anal-sadistic phase of development
-A disproportionate ratio of concomitant personality disorders
Q U E S T I O N 44
Jaime is a 19-year-old woman who is in psychiatric care as a condition of probation. She first came to the attention of the juvenile detention system when she was 15 years old. She was babysitting for a neighbor, and the parents came home early and found that she was exposing her breasts to the 9-year-old child in her care. Since then she has had several similar episodes, and since turning 18, she has been arrested several times for exposing herself to children and teenagers. During her evaluation, she admits that the only way she can experience arousal and orgasm is to engage in this behavior and then masturbate afterward. She has had more conventional sexual experiences but does not enjoy them. When considering a diagnosis of paraphilic disorder, the PMHNP recognizes that which of the following features is inconsistent with the typical paraphilic disorder patient?
-The subtype; exhibitionism is a very uncommon form of paraphilia
-The fact that Jaime is female; almost all patients with paraphilia are male
-The inability to experience arousal or orgasm any other way
-The onset before age 18
Q U E S T I O N 45
R.M. is an 81-year-old male who was evaluated at his own request because of his failing memory. He is an active older adult and has enjoyed a comfortable retirement lifestyle, but over the last year he has become increasingly troubled by his forgetfulness. His wife agrees that it has extended beyond the occasional memory lapse; he forgets names of things he should know and has forgotten commitments to friends and family. After a thorough evaluation, the PMHNP diagnoses mild cognitive impairment (MCI). R.M. asks if this is really Alzheimer's disease, if it is going to get worse, and what can he do about it? The most appropriate response would be to tell R.M. that:
-His cognitive function will likely decrease 10–15% per year
-The diagnosis is not stable and he may revert to normal function
-Cholinesterase inhibitors, such as donepezil, will improve memory but not cure the condition
-There is no identified link between mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer’s dementia
Q U E S T I O N 46
Trayvon is a 28-year-old male who was recently discharged from the military as a result of some behavioral issues leading to early termination. He was never in a combat situation, and his behavior and anger seem to predate his military enlistment. He is only in care because the military offers this as a transitional service, and Trayvon thinks it will help him be successful with future job applications. During a comprehensive evaluation of Trayvon, the PMHNP realizes that, among other things, he is experiencing postictal dysphoria. Predictably this is causing some problems with his girlfriend, and he asks if there is anything he can take to help. The PMHNP advises that:
-Antianxiety agents have been successful in some patients
-This is most often due to issues in the relationship and dual-sex therapy is indicated
-Insight-oriented psychotherapy is necessary to help him identify unconscious antecedents to his behavior
-This is probably one symptom of an underlying personality disorder and requires treatment of the primary problem
Q U E S T I O N 47
In addition to the diagnostic criteria observed in patients with schizophrenia, physical examination of these patients is frequently characterized by:
-Hyperreflexia
-Saccadic movement
-Rheumatoid arthritis
-Type 1 diabetes mellitus
Q U E S T I O N 48
D.M. is a 21-year-old male who presents for admission with his mother. He reports that he "cannot get himself together." He is disoriented x 3 and his thought processes are chaotic. His speech is disorganized, he is easily distracted, and he appears to be rather agitated. He admits to both visual and auditory hallucinations over the last few weeks, and says he can "hear through the walls." He was unable to sit still during the evaluation, often getting up and pacing the room, looking out of the windows, and then appearing to listen to something no one else could hear. According to his mother, his behavior has been bizarre for weeks; he has been wandering the neighborhood aimlessly, and reports that he was raped by a male neighbor. His mother finally brought him to the hospital. He appears unaware of his circumstances. D.M. is a poor historian, but does admit to drug and alcohol use on and off for several years. According to his mother, he had a scholarship to college, but it was withdrawn last semester when he stopped going to classes. A screening laboratory assessment is within normal limits, and the PMHNP considers a diagnosis of schizophrenia. D.M.'s presentation is most consistent with which type?
-Paranoid
-Disorganized
-Undifferentiated
-Catatonic
Q U E S T I O N 49
Corny has been referred to the PMHNP because she has a significant sleep disorder that has not been responsive to typical primary care strategies. She has tried sedative hypnotics, improving sleep hygiene, avoiding daytime naps, melatonin, and almost anything else suggested. She has always had trouble sleeping "like normal people," but she is newly married and her sporadic sleep patterns are beginning to cause stress in the marriage. Her history suggests a circadian rhythm sleep disorder. When counseling Coryn, the PMHNP advises her that all the following strategies have demonstrated success except:
-Chronotherapy
-Phototherapy
-Tasimelteon
-Zaleplon
Q U E S T I O N 50
When evaluating the patient with dementia, the PMHNP recognizes that one of the clinical differences between cortical and subcortical dementias is that in subcortical dementia an early finding will typically not include which of the following?
-Impaired visuospatial skills
-Depressed mood
-Dysarthria
-Aphasia [Show Less]