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  1. Home
  2. /Practice questions
  3. /Heart failure practice questions (NCLEX-style)

Practice questions

Heart failure practice questions (NCLEX-style)

Clinical judgment practice on heart failure, volume status, medications, and escalation — scoped NCLEX-RN-style items with pathway-aligned rationales in the app.

How to use this topic page

Heart failure items on high-stakes nursing exams reward a tight loop: recognize the pattern (perfusion versus congestion), tie it to assessment data you would actually collect at the bedside, and pick the safest next step under time pressure. Is this patient dry, wet, cold, or warm? Does the stem quietly shift from stable compensation to impending shock? The stem is rarely a vocabulary quiz; it is a sequence of cues where one detail should change your priority.

Volume overload, reduced cardiac output, and medication effects interact constantly. Diuretics, afterload reduction, neurohormonal blockade, and device therapy each bring monitoring obligations—labs, orthostatic checks, renal signals, and patient education about daily weights and symptom thresholds. Practice trains you to see which cue belongs to which problem so you do not anchor on a single flashy vital sign.

Use this page to preview a small, rotating sample from the NurseNest bank. Each item is drawn from the same pathway-scoped pool subscribers use, not a separate toy set. Open your exam hub when you are ready for full filters, rationales, and spaced repetition alongside lessons. If heart failure stays a weak domain, pair questions with a cardiovascular lesson block, then return within a few days while the pattern is still fresh.

Browse all public question bank entry points by exam pathway, or explore lessons when you need depth before drilling items.

Embedded question preview

6 per page · 524 matches in pool

  1. Question 1

    A nurse is caring for a client with acute decompensated heart failure. The client's oxygen saturation drops to 88% on 4 L/min nasal cannula, and the nurse hears bilateral crackles throughout all lung fields. The client is sitting upright and appears anxious. Which action should the nurse take first?

    • AIncrease the oxygen delivery to a high-flow device and notify the rapid response team
    • BAdminister the PRN furosemide 40 mg IV as ordered
    • CObtain an arterial blood gas
    • D
← PreviousPage 9 of 88Next →

Exam hubs

  • NCLEX-RN (United States) — open hub · Public questions landing
  • NCLEX-RN (Canada) — open hub · Public questions landing

Related topic pages

  • Infection control nursing practice questions
  • DHA exam practice questions (clinical judgment)

Study with full depth

Create an account to unlock rationales, filters, and the same pathway scope as these previews—without loading the entire bank at once.

Sign up freeOpen in-app question bankPractice exams overview
  1. Home
  2. /Practice questions
  3. /Heart failure practice questions (NCLEX-style)

Practice questions

Heart failure practice questions (NCLEX-style)

Clinical judgment practice on heart failure, volume status, medications, and escalation — scoped NCLEX-RN-style items with pathway-aligned rationales in the app.

How to use this topic page

Heart failure items on high-stakes nursing exams reward a tight loop: recognize the pattern (perfusion versus congestion), tie it to assessment data you would actually collect at the bedside, and pick the safest next step under time pressure. Is this patient dry, wet, cold, or warm? Does the stem quietly shift from stable compensation to impending shock? The stem is rarely a vocabulary quiz; it is a sequence of cues where one detail should change your priority.

Volume overload, reduced cardiac output, and medication effects interact constantly. Diuretics, afterload reduction, neurohormonal blockade, and device therapy each bring monitoring obligations—labs, orthostatic checks, renal signals, and patient education about daily weights and symptom thresholds. Practice trains you to see which cue belongs to which problem so you do not anchor on a single flashy vital sign.

Use this page to preview a small, rotating sample from the NurseNest bank. Each item is drawn from the same pathway-scoped pool subscribers use, not a separate toy set. Open your exam hub when you are ready for full filters, rationales, and spaced repetition alongside lessons. If heart failure stays a weak domain, pair questions with a cardiovascular lesson block, then return within a few days while the pattern is still fresh.

Browse all public question bank entry points by exam pathway, or explore lessons when you need depth before drilling items.

Embedded question preview

6 per page · 524 matches in pool

  1. Question 1

    A nurse is caring for a client with acute decompensated heart failure. The client's oxygen saturation drops to 88% on 4 L/min nasal cannula, and the nurse hears bilateral crackles throughout all lung fields. The client is sitting upright and appears anxious. Which action should the nurse take first?

    • AIncrease the oxygen delivery to a high-flow device and notify the rapid response team
    • BAdminister the PRN furosemide 40 mg IV as ordered
    • CObtain an arterial blood gas
    • D
← PreviousPage 9 of 88Next →

Exam hubs

  • NCLEX-RN (United States) — open hub · Public questions landing
  • NCLEX-RN (Canada) — open hub · Public questions landing

Related topic pages

  • Infection control nursing practice questions
  • DHA exam practice questions (clinical judgment)

Study with full depth

Create an account to unlock rationales, filters, and the same pathway scope as these previews—without loading the entire bank at once.

Sign up freeOpen in-app question bankPractice exams overview
Place the client in a supine position to improve cardiac output

Answers and rationales unlock after sign-in — public pages show difficulty and reading load only.

  • Question 2

    A nurse is caring for a patient with a history of heart failure who has developed a new onset of symptoms including fatigue, dyspnea, and cough with pink frothy sputum. What is the nurse's priority intervention?

    • AAdminister diuretics as prescribed.
    • BObtain a chest X-ray.
    • CAdminister oxygen therapy.
    • DNotify the healthcare provider.

    Answers and rationales unlock after sign-in — public pages show difficulty and reading load only.

  • Question 3

    Which symptoms occur with pulmonary edema?

    • ADyspnea
    • BCrackles
    • CPink frothy sputum
    • DTachypnea
    • EBradycardia

    Answers and rationales unlock after sign-in — public pages show difficulty and reading load only.

  • Question 4

    A client with Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome on ECG has a delta wave. If atrial fibrillation develops, the nurse should NOT administer:

    • AProcainamide
    • BAV nodal blocking agents (adenosine, beta-blockers, CCBs, digoxin) as they can cause fatal ventricular fibrillation
    • CIV amiodarone
    • DElectrical cardioversion

    Answers and rationales unlock after sign-in — public pages show difficulty and reading load only.

  • Question 5

    A nurse is caring for a client who received fibrinolytic therapy (alteplase) for an acute STEMI. Which assessment finding requires immediate notification of the provider?

    • ASudden onset of severe headache with altered level of consciousness
    • BOozing from the IV insertion site
    • CBlood pressure of 138/82 mmHg
    • DMild nausea 30 minutes after infusion

    Answers and rationales unlock after sign-in — public pages show difficulty and reading load only.

  • Question 6

    Which finding indicates worsening heart failure?

    • ACrackles in lungs
    • BDry skin
    • CBradycardia
    • DHypotension

    Answers and rationales unlock after sign-in — public pages show difficulty and reading load only.

  • Place the client in a supine position to improve cardiac output

    Answers and rationales unlock after sign-in — public pages show difficulty and reading load only.

  • Question 2

    A nurse is caring for a patient with a history of heart failure who has developed a new onset of symptoms including fatigue, dyspnea, and cough with pink frothy sputum. What is the nurse's priority intervention?

    • AAdminister diuretics as prescribed.
    • BObtain a chest X-ray.
    • CAdminister oxygen therapy.
    • DNotify the healthcare provider.

    Answers and rationales unlock after sign-in — public pages show difficulty and reading load only.

  • Question 3

    Which symptoms occur with pulmonary edema?

    • ADyspnea
    • BCrackles
    • CPink frothy sputum
    • DTachypnea
    • EBradycardia

    Answers and rationales unlock after sign-in — public pages show difficulty and reading load only.

  • Question 4

    A client with Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome on ECG has a delta wave. If atrial fibrillation develops, the nurse should NOT administer:

    • AProcainamide
    • BAV nodal blocking agents (adenosine, beta-blockers, CCBs, digoxin) as they can cause fatal ventricular fibrillation
    • CIV amiodarone
    • DElectrical cardioversion

    Answers and rationales unlock after sign-in — public pages show difficulty and reading load only.

  • Question 5

    A nurse is caring for a client who received fibrinolytic therapy (alteplase) for an acute STEMI. Which assessment finding requires immediate notification of the provider?

    • ASudden onset of severe headache with altered level of consciousness
    • BOozing from the IV insertion site
    • CBlood pressure of 138/82 mmHg
    • DMild nausea 30 minutes after infusion

    Answers and rationales unlock after sign-in — public pages show difficulty and reading load only.

  • Question 6

    Which finding indicates worsening heart failure?

    • ACrackles in lungs
    • BDry skin
    • CBradycardia
    • DHypotension

    Answers and rationales unlock after sign-in — public pages show difficulty and reading load only.