Preparing for the Certified Medical Assistant (CMA) exam requires dedication, consistent study, and, most importantly, realistic practice. The clinical and administrative knowledge required to pass is vast, and simulating the exam environment is the best way to ensure you are ready for test day. Whether you are nearing the end of your study plan or checking your progress mid-way, this test is designed to challenge your retention and critical thinking skills. Pass CMA Exam on Your First Try by utilizing this comprehensive resource to identify your strengths and shore up your weak areas before you sit for the actual certification.
What’s Covered
- Clinical Procedures: Assisting with minor surgeries, electrocardiography (ECG), and diagnostic testing.
- Patient Care: Techniques for patient positioning, draping, and ensuring physical and emotional comfort.
- Vital Signs: Accurate measurement and recording of blood pressure, pulse, respiration, temperature, and pain.
- Pharmacology: Drug classifications, routes of administration, dosage calculations, and medication safety.
- Infection Control: Aseptic techniques, sterilization methods, and standard precautions.
Why This Matters
Clinical competence is the backbone of the medical assisting profession. Employers rely on CMAs to not only understand the theory behind medical procedures but to execute them flawlessly in a fast-paced environment. A strong grasp of infection control and pharmacology is directly linked to patient safety and outcomes. By testing yourself on these specific domains, you are doing more than memorizing facts; you are verifying that you possess the practical knowledge necessary to protect patients and support physicians effectively. This practice test serves as a crucial checkpoint to ensure you have mastered the clinical responsibilities required of a certified professional.
How to Use This Test
To gain the most accurate assessment of your readiness, simulate the actual testing conditions. Find a quiet, distraction-free environment and set a timer to pace yourself. Try to answer all 53 questions without referring to your textbooks or notes. Once you have completed the exam, review your results thoroughly. Do not just look at what you got right; spend time analyzing the explanations for incorrect answers. This review process is where the most significant learning happens, helping you close knowledge gaps before the real exam.
What to Focus On
- Dosage Calculations: Review formulas for converting between measurement systems and calculating IV drip rates or oral dosages.
- Vital Sign Anomalies: Recognize abnormal values (e.g., hypertension or arrhythmias) and understand the immediate reporting protocols.
- Chain of Infection: Understand the specific methods to break the chain of infection, including proper hand hygiene and the use of personal protective equipment (PPE).
- Medication Administration: Know the “Seven Rights” of medication administration and the proper techniques for intradermal, subcutaneous, and intramuscular injections.
- Emergency Procedures: Be prepared to identify and respond to situations such as anaphylaxis, syncope, or cardiac arrest in the clinical setting.
Start Your Practice Test
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Categories
- Billing, Coding and Insurance 0%
- Bookkeeping, Credits and Collections 0%
- Emergency Procedures and First Aid 0%
- Exam Room Techniques, Patient Preparation and Infection Control 0%
- Law, Ethics and Professionalism 0%
- Medical Records and Office Supplies 0%
- Medical Terminology and Anatomy 0%
- Office Laboratory Procedures 0%
- Oral and Written Communication, Data Entry, Computers and Mail 0%
- Pathophysiology and Nutrition 0%
- Pharmacology 0%
- Psychology and Communication 0%
- Scheduling and Office Management 0%
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Question 1 of 100
1. Question
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Hint: Remember that vaccine product CPT codes fall in the 90000-series specific to immunizations rather than visit/E&M or minor procedure numeric ranges.
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Question 2 of 100
2. Question
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Hint: Remember that evaluation and management office visit CPT codes fall in the 99201โ99215 series, whereas numeric codes in the 10000s, 40000s, or 80000s typically represent procedures or lab/pathology services.
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Question 3 of 100
3. Question
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Hint: Think about codes used for encounters, screenings, and circumstances that affect a personโs health but are not a current disease or injury diagnosis.
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Question 4 of 100
4. Question
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Hint: Think about the ICD-O field that records tumor cell type and behavior โ that specific code is used to capture neoplasm morphology.
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Question 5 of 100
5. Question
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Hint: Think about the system where every transaction affects at least two accounts so that the accounting equation always stays balancedโdebits and credits must match.
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Question 6 of 100
6. Question
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Hint: Think about the accounting equation (Assets = Liabilities + Equity) and which category represents what the business owes โ its debts and obligations.
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Question 7 of 100
7. Question
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Hint: Think of the bookkeeping method nicknamed the “write-it-once” system where daily transactions are entered once on a day sheet and a physical alignment tool creates simultaneous copies for posting.
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Question 8 of 100
8. Question
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Hint: Think of the itemized encounter form completed at the point of care that lists procedures and diagnosis codes used to generate charges and support claim submission.
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Question 9 of 100
9. Question
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Hint: Consider which payment instruments involve the issuer or bank taking responsibility to guarantee funds at paymentโthese are sold or endorsed in a way that secures payment to the payee.
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Question 10 of 100
10. Question
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Hint: Think about the fraud term for assigning a higher-level procedure code than what was actually performed to obtain greater reimbursement.
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Question 11 of 100
11. Question
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Hint: Think of a superficial injury caused by scraping the skin against a rough surface that removes the top layers (often called “road rash”).
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Question 12 of 100
12. Question
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Hint: The combination of very high blood glucose, ketonuria, and recent insulin omission points to insulin deficiency with increased lipolysis and ketone production leading to metabolic acidosis rather than low glucose or pure fluid disorder.
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Question 13 of 100
13. Question
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Hint: The priority is immediate decontamination to remove the plant oil (urushiol) from the skin before applying topical treatments or seeking further guidance.
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Question 14 of 100
14. Question
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Hint: For infants under one year, check the pulse on the inner aspect of the upper arm between the biceps and triceps where the artery lies against the boneโit’s more reliable than peripheral sites in this age group.
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Question 15 of 100
15. Question
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Hint: A partial coronary artery obstruction causing reduced oxygen delivery leads to reversible myocardial oxygen deprivation without permanent tissue deathโcontrast this with terms that imply heart failure or actual infarcted (dead) muscle.
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Question 16 of 100
16. Question
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Hint: Use the pediatric modification of the rule of nines: because a child’s head is proportionally larger, each whole lower extremity is assigned a smaller percentage than the adult 18%โthink mid-teens rather than single digits or near-20s.
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Question 17 of 100
17. Question
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Hint: Think about fractures that occur in pliable, immature bones of children where the bone bends on one side and breaks on the otherโan incomplete fracture common in pediatrics.
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Question 18 of 100
18. Question
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Hint: Think of the brief statement in the patientโs own words that summarizes their primary reason for seeking careโusually documented at the start of the encounter.
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Question 19 of 100
19. Question
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Hint: Emphasize adherence to prescribed antibiotic regimensโusing the correct drug at the right dose for the recommended duration reduces survival of partially resistant organisms and helps prevent resistance.
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Question 20 of 100
20. Question
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Hint: Objective findings are those you can see or measure during the exam, not symptoms described by the patientโidentify which listed item is directly observable on inspection.
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Question 21 of 100
21. Question
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Hint: Consider which label is outdated and misleading in modern practiceโhypertension is classified by cause (primary/secondary) and severity (including malignant), not by a reassuring-sounding term implying no risk.
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Question 22 of 100
22. Question
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Hint: This refers to information described by the patient about their experience (how they feel or symptoms) rather than something the clinician can observe or measure.
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Question 23 of 100
23. Question
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Hint: Consider how conjunctivitis spreads in community settingsโthink contact with infected eye secretions and contaminated surfaces (fomite transmission), especially when someone rubs their eyes after touching objects.
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Question 24 of 100
24. Question
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Hint: Notice the way the question presumes the patientโs behavior and biases the response toward agreement; consider what type of question encourages a specific answer rather than inviting more information.
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Question 25 of 100
25. Question
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Hint: Consider which nonverbal behavior would signal impatience or distract the patient and undermine rapport rather than facilitate active listening and engagement.
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Question 26 of 100
26. Question
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Hint: This pattern is a form of periodic breathing marked by cyclic crescendoโdecrescendo tidal volumes with alternating apnea and hyperventilation, often seen in heart failure or central nervous system injuries.
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Question 27 of 100
27. Question
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Hint: Think of involuntary, abrupt, nonโrhythmic, โdanceโlikeโ movements that appear to flow and shift from one body part to anotherโoften described in association with basal ganglia disorders.
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Question 28 of 100
28. Question
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Hint: Recall common cardiovascular risk factors are metabolic (like diabetes), lifestyle (physical inactivity), and blood pressureโrelated; identify which option is unrelated to those typical cardiac risk categories.
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Question 29 of 100
29. Question
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Hint: Think about the components of an HPIโonset, timing, modifying factors, and associated signsโand recall that allergy information is documented in a separate allergies/medical history section, not the narrative of the present illness.
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Question 30 of 100
30. Question
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Hint: Identify the anatomical term that denotes pain located directly beneath or behind the sternum, and distinguish it from terms meaning “beside the sternum” or referencing clavicular landmarks.
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Question 31 of 100
31. Question
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Hint: Think of the category for the most serious offenses that typically carry long prison terms (usually more than one year) rather than fines or short sentences.
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Question 32 of 100
32. Question
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Hint: Consider the term for intentionally stealing or misappropriating company funds for personal gainโan illegal financial misuse of assets rather than a lapse in care, confidentiality, or therapeutic boundary terminology.
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Question 33 of 100
33. Question
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Hint: Focus on the term that legally describes unwanted physical contact or force actually applied to someoneโs body, rather than just the threat or fear of such contact.
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Question 34 of 100
34. Question
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Hint: The HPI focuses on the details of the current complaintโonset, location, timing, and accompanying symptomsโwhereas allergies are typically documented in the medical/allergy history rather than the narrative of the chief problem.
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Question 35 of 100
35. Question
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Hint: Think of the placeholder that is inserted into the spot where a patientโs chart used to be to indicate the chart has been removed and who has it โ a small marker that literally shows the file is “out.”
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Question 36 of 100
36. Question
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Hint: When surnames are identical, use the given (first) name to determine orderโarrange the first names alphabetically as you would words in a dictionary.
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Question 37 of 100
37. Question
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Hint: Compare the last names letter by letter โ where the first differing letter appears, the name with the earlier alphabet character comes first; if one name is identical up to its end, the shorter name precedes the longer.
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Question 38 of 100
38. Question
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Hint: Think about medical record organization by where information originatesโSOMR refers to a filing system that groups notes and reports according to their source (e.g., lab, physician, nursing).
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Question 39 of 100
39. Question
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Hint: Think passive transport that moves substances down their concentration gradient using carrier or channel proteins (no ATP required), rather than active processes like chemical breakdown or sensory detection.
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Question 40 of 100
40. Question
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Hint: During intense exercise when oxygen is scarce, muscles rely on anaerobic glycolysis and produce an acid that contributes to the burning sensation and muscle fatigue by lowering pH.
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Question 41 of 100
41. Question
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Hint: Think about the contraction where muscle fiber length changes (shortens or lengthens) to produce movement, as opposed to generating tension with no change in length.
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Question 42 of 100
42. Question
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Hint: Identify the highly coiled duct located along the superior/posterior aspect of the testis that functions mainly in sperm maturation and storage.
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Question 43 of 100
43. Question
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Hint: Think of the single tubular structure in the male that serves as a shared channel for both the urinary and reproductive systems, running through the penis to the external meatus.
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Question 44 of 100
44. Question
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Hint: Think of the fluid that surrounds the fetus in utero and is sampled during amniocentesis for genetic analysisโthis fluid often contains fetal cells.
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Question 45 of 100
45. Question
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Hint: Consider the obstetric term used to describe the widening or opening of the cervical canal during labor, commonly measured in centimeters.
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Question 46 of 100
46. Question
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Hint: The middle ear is an air-filled cavity housing the ossicles and openings into the inner earโremember the organ of Corti is in the cochlea (inner ear) and the auricle and tympanic membrane are external or boundary structures.
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Question 47 of 100
47. Question
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Hint: Think of the term that specifically describes difficulty breathing that occurs when a person is supine (lying flat), often seen in heart failure and some pulmonary conditions.
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Question 48 of 100
48. Question
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Hint: Recall the four standard abdominal quadrant abbreviations are based on right vs left and upper vs lowerโRUQ, LUQ, RLQ, and LLQโso compare each choice to these standard terms.
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Question 49 of 100
49. Question
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Hint: Think of the medical term that specifically describes chest pain caused by myocardial ischemia rather than a rhythm disturbance or the underlying vessel disease itself.
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Question 50 of 100
50. Question
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Hint: The nine abdominal regions use anatomical landmarks and latin-derived region names (e.g., hypochondriac, epigastric, iliac); consider which option names the organ itself rather than a standard regional term.
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Question 51 of 100
51. Question
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Hint: Think of the suffix that means a surgical puncture or needle aspiration used specifically to withdraw fluid from a body cavity or joint.
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Question 52 of 100
52. Question
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Hint: The calcaneus is the posterior-most tarsal bone that forms the prominent bony projection at the back of the foot you bear weight on when standing.
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Question 53 of 100
53. Question
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Hint: For unexplained bruising and hematomas think bleeding disordersโchoose the test that evaluates coagulation factor function (particularly the intrinsic pathway), rather than red cell counts or white cell number.
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Question 54 of 100
54. Question
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Hint: The guaiac (fecal occult blood) test detects hidden blood in stool and is used to screen for bleeding related to colorectal disease rather than cancers of the lung, breast, or prostate.
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Question 55 of 100
55. Question
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Hint: Think of the lab test that measures glycosylated hemoglobin to reflect average blood glucose control over the prior 2โ3 months.
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Question 56 of 100
56. Question
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Hint: Choose the first-line, noninvasive imaging modality that uses sound waves to directly visualize the gallbladder and biliary tree when cholelithiasis is suspected.
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Question 57 of 100
57. Question
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Hint: Hypertension is diagnosed by directly measuring arterial pressureโthink about the bedside instrument and technique used to obtain accurate systolic and diastolic readings.
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Question 58 of 100
58. Question
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Hint: Routine cholesterol/LDL screening typically begins earlier in men than in womenโthink mid-30s for men and mid-40s for women.
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Question 59 of 100
59. Question
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Hint: CHD equivalents are typically systemic atherosclerotic arterial diseases that confer high coronary riskโcontrast arterial atherosclerosis with venous thrombotic/inflammatory conditions when choosing the odd one out.
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Question 60 of 100
60. Question
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Hint: Consider the age that marks the beginning of the fourth decade of lifeโmany guidelines recommend initiating routine baseline screening mammography at that milestone.
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Question 61 of 100
61. Question
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Hint: Identify the device that primarily presents processed information to the user (visual display) rather than capturing, storing, or controlling input.
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Question 62 of 100
62. Question
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Hint: Consider the common consumer electronics abbreviation used for optical discs that store movies and computer data rather than technical electrical or vehicle-related terms.
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Question 63 of 100
63. Question
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Hint: Think of the term used for the unreadable output of an encryption process that is contrasted with “plaintext”โit’s the coded form of the original data that unauthorized users cannot interpret.
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Question 64 of 100
64. Question
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Hint: Think of the standard language used to create and structure web pages โ itโs related to “hypertext” and “markup,” not hardware monitoring or an email service.
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Question 65 of 100
65. Question
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Hint: Three of the choices are standard image or document formats used for storing pictures or text; the odd one out is a shortcut/URL file type rather than a media or document format.
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Question 66 of 100
66. Question
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Hint: Think about a telecom term describing a connection to an individual customer’s telephone lineโfocus on the words that describe who it’s for and the physical medium carrying the signal.
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Question 67 of 100
67. Question
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Hint: Think about the top-level domain commonly reserved for accredited educational institutions and universities in the United States.
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Question 68 of 100
68. Question
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Hint: Think of the numeric addressing system used to identify and route devices on an IP networkโcommonly shown as four octets in IPv4 or colon-separated hex groups in IPv6.
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Question 69 of 100
69. Question
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Hint: Recall that a web browser is an application used to access websites; eliminate any choice that represents an operating system rather than a web client.
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Question 70 of 100
70. Question
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Hint: Think about the term that describes a connection’s data transfer capacity or throughputโthe volume of bits that can move across a channel (often expressed in bits per second).
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Question 71 of 100
71. Question
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Hint: Think of the lipid known as “bad cholesterol” that contributes to atherosclerotic plaque build-up and is directly associated with increased coronary artery disease risk.
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Question 72 of 100
72. Question
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Hint: Gout is caused by uric acid buildup from purine metabolismโrecommend reducing intake of highโpurine foods (like red/organ meats and certain seafood) to lower uric acid production.
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Question 73 of 100
73. Question
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Hint: These signs point to a deficiency of an intracellular cation essential for muscle and bowel functionโmanagement is replacement of that specific electrolyte, given orally for mild cases or IV for severe/symptomatic hypovolemia.
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Question 74 of 100
74. Question
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Hint: This term describes the movement of digested nutrients across the intestinal wall into the blood or lymphatic system, not the breakdown of food or the chemical use of nutrients by cells.
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Question 75 of 100
75. Question
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Hint: Remember that each gram of fat provides about 9 kilocaloriesโmultiply the grams of fat by this value to find total calories.
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Question 76 of 100
76. Question
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Hint: Fat-soluble vitamins are A, D, E, and K and are stored in liver and adipose tissueโthink of compounds related to vitamin A (retinoids) when choosing the correct option.
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Question 77 of 100
77. Question
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Hint: Think of the pediatric vaccine that protects against three bacterial illnessesโremember “whooping cough” (pertussis), “lockjaw” (tetanus), and the membrane-forming throat infection (diphtheria).
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Question 78 of 100
78. Question
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Hint: Recall the sequence of common Latin dosing abbreviations (bid, tid, qid) and that these abbreviations indicate increasing dosing frequencyโplace qid as the most frequent of the three.
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Question 79 of 100
79. Question
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Hint: For controlled substances, pharmacists verify the prescriber’s federal registration identifier issued by the Drug Enforcement Administration to ensure authorization to prescribe these medications.
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Question 80 of 100
80. Question
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Hint: Focus on drugs used to treat erectile dysfunction that work by enhancing nitric oxideโmediated smooth muscle relaxation via the cGMP pathway (PDE5 inhibitors).
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Question 81 of 100
81. Question
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Hint: Focus on the classification for substances with a high potential for abuse and no accepted medical use in treatment in the U.S.; that distinction separates the most restricted schedule from those with limited medical applications.
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Question 82 of 100
82. Question
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Hint: Think of the route that delivers medication directly into the bloodstream, bypassing absorption barriers and providing 100% bioavailability with the fastest onset.
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Question 83 of 100
83. Question
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Hint: Consider medications that directly impair clot formation or platelet functionโthese are typically avoided in patients with bleeding disorders because they increase the risk of hemorrhage.
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Question 84 of 100
84. Question
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Hint: This medication is a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) commonly prescribed as an antidepressant for major depressive disorder and other mood-related conditions.
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Question 85 of 100
85. Question
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Hint: Think about which listed site is commonly used for subcutaneous injections (like insulin) rather than intramuscular onesโidentify the tissue layer under the skin at that site.
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Question 86 of 100
86. Question
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Hint: Think about the layer of tissue just beneath the dermis that contains adipose tissueโthis is the route used for medications intended to be absorbed slowly into the fatty layer.
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Question 87 of 100
87. Question
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Hint: Consider the psychologist associated with humanistic psychology and the concept of a needs “pyramid” culminating in self-actualization.
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Question 88 of 100
88. Question
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Hint: Think of Maslowโs hierarchyโthis stage is about personal growth and achieving your fullest abilities rather than basic needs like safety, belonging, or social recognition.
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Question 89 of 100
89. Question
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Hint: This stage from Eriksonโs model centers on an infantโs first year when consistent, responsive caregiving shapes whether they develop a sense of security or doubt.
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Question 90 of 100
90. Question
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Hint: Think about a learned association where a previously neutral cue (like mention of a place) elicits an emotional response because it has been paired with unpleasant experiencesโthis is the hallmark of classical conditioning.
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Question 91 of 100
91. Question
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Hint: Think about the psychologist who studied behavior shaped by rewards and punishments using the “Skinner box” and reinforcement schedules rather than reflex associations.
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Question 92 of 100
92. Question
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Hint: Think of the term that describes a prejudgment or negative attitude toward someone based solely on their group membershipโan attitude, not a legal action or a psychological defense mechanism.
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Question 93 of 100
93. Question
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Hint: Think about the immediate physiological response mediated by the sympathetic nervous system that prepares the body to confront or escape a threatโheart rate and adrenaline increase for rapid action.
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Question 94 of 100
94. Question
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Hint: Consider typical gross motor milestonesโmost infants roll over and achieve unsupported sitting around the middle of the first year, often between four and seven months.
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Question 95 of 100
95. Question
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Hint: Consider the organization known for overseeing health information/medical records professionals and offering credentials like RHIA/RHIT; it’s the national association focused specifically on health information management.
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Question 96 of 100
96. Question
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Hint: Prioritize verifying delivered items against the packing slip to ensure accuracy, completeness, and proper inventory documentation before storing or notifying others.
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Question 97 of 100
97. Question
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Hint: FICA is a payroll tax for Social Security/Medicare that involves both withholding from the employee’s paycheck and an employer contributionโconsider how payroll taxes are typically handled in terms of withholding vs. matching.
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Question 98 of 100
98. Question
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Hint: Think about checks that accompany detailed documentation authorizing regular disbursements to employees rather than one-time purchases or currency exchange.
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Question 99 of 100
99. Question
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Hint: Think about a systematic, written method that records caller details, time, message, and follow-up actions to ensure nothing is missed or forgotten.
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Question 100 of 100
100. Question
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Hint: Consider which communication methods are commonly used for direct, private reminders and which are less practical or secure for individual patient appointment notifications.
Medical Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and is intended to serve as a practice resource for the CMA exam. It is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.