Nursing (NCLEX)

Physiological Adaptation Reviewer for NCLEX-RN 2026 (Complete Guide)

LisensyaPrep TeamMay 31, 202613 min read

Physiological Adaptation is one of the largest NCLEX-RN categories at 11-17% of the exam. It covers the body's response to acute, chronic, and life-threatening conditions across all body systems. This is where your medical-surgical nursing knowledge is tested most directly.

This reviewer covers the high-yield conditions, emergencies, and body system alterations most frequently tested on the 2026 NCLEX-RN.


What Physiological Adaptation Covers

This category tests your ability to:

  • Manage medical emergencies
  • Recognize and respond to complications
  • Understand pathophysiology
  • Provide care for acute and chronic illnesses
  • Manage fluid and electrolyte imbalances
  • Interpret hemodynamic changes

Fluid and Electrolyte Imbalances (High-Yield)

Electrolyte questions appear frequently. Memorize normal values and the signs of imbalances.

Sodium (Normal: 135-145 mEq/L)

Hyponatremia (<135):

  • Causes: SIADH, excessive water intake, diuretics, vomiting/diarrhea
  • Signs: confusion, headache, seizures, nausea, muscle cramps
  • Treatment: fluid restriction (SIADH), careful sodium replacement (correct slowly to avoid central pontine myelinolysis)

Hypernatremia (>145):

  • Causes: dehydration, diabetes insipidus, excessive sodium intake
  • Signs: thirst, dry mucous membranes, restlessness, seizures
  • Treatment: fluid replacement, address underlying cause

Potassium (Normal: 3.5-5.0 mEq/L)

Hypokalemia (<3.5):

  • Causes: diuretics, vomiting, diarrhea, NG suction
  • Signs: muscle weakness, flat T waves, U waves, dysrhythmias, decreased reflexes
  • Treatment: oral or IV potassium (NEVER IV push)

Hyperkalemia (>5.0):

  • Causes: renal failure, ACE inhibitors, potassium-sparing diuretics, tissue damage
  • Signs: peaked T waves, widened QRS, muscle weakness, cardiac arrest
  • Treatment: calcium gluconate (cardiac protection), insulin/glucose, kayexalate, dialysis

NCLEX trick: Hyperkalemia peaked T waves and hypokalemia U waves are classic ECG findings.

Calcium (Normal: 8.5-10.5 mg/dL)

Hypocalcemia (<8.5):

  • Signs: tetany, Chvostek's sign, Trousseau's sign, seizures, tingling
  • Treatment: calcium replacement

Hypercalcemia (>10.5):

  • Causes: hyperparathyroidism, malignancy
  • Signs: weakness, kidney stones, constipation, confusion
  • Treatment: hydration, bisphosphonates

Magnesium (Normal: 1.8-2.6 mg/dL)

Hypomagnesemia: tremors, tetany, dysrhythmias (torsades de pointes)

Hypermagnesemia: decreased reflexes, respiratory depression, bradycardia


Acid-Base Balance (Frequently Tested)

Master ABG interpretation. Memorize normal values:

  • pH: 7.35-7.45
  • PaCO2: 35-45 mmHg
  • HCO3: 22-26 mEq/L

The Four Imbalances

Respiratory Acidosis (pH low, CO2 high)

  • Causes: hypoventilation, COPD, respiratory depression
  • Signs: confusion, dyspnea, headache

Respiratory Alkalosis (pH high, CO2 low)

  • Causes: hyperventilation, anxiety, pain, fever
  • Signs: lightheadedness, tingling, tetany

Metabolic Acidosis (pH low, HCO3 low)

  • Causes: DKA, renal failure, diarrhea, lactic acidosis
  • Signs: Kussmaul respirations, confusion

Metabolic Alkalosis (pH high, HCO3 high)

  • Causes: vomiting, NG suction, excessive antacids
  • Signs: muscle cramps, dizziness

ROME method: Respiratory Opposite (pH and CO2 move opposite directions), Metabolic Equal (pH and HCO3 move same direction).


Cardiovascular Emergencies

Myocardial Infarction (MI)

Signs: crushing chest pain (may radiate to arm/jaw), diaphoresis, dyspnea, nausea. Women and diabetics may have atypical symptoms.

Diagnosis: ECG (ST elevation in STEMI), troponin elevation.

Treatment (MONA-B): Morphine, Oxygen (if hypoxic), Nitroglycerin, Aspirin (chewed), Beta-blocker. Reperfusion (PCI within 90 minutes) is critical.

Heart Failure

Left-sided HF: pulmonary symptoms (dyspnea, crackles, pink frothy sputum, orthopnea)

Right-sided HF: systemic symptoms (peripheral edema, JVD, hepatomegaly, weight gain)

Treatment: diuretics, ACE inhibitors, beta-blockers, daily weights, sodium/fluid restriction, high Fowler's position.

Acute Pulmonary Edema

Signs: severe dyspnea, pink frothy sputum, crackles, anxiety.

Treatment: high Fowler's, oxygen, IV furosemide, morphine, possibly positive pressure ventilation.


Respiratory Conditions

COPD

Pathophysiology: chronic airflow limitation, CO2 retention, hypoxic drive.

Care: low-flow oxygen (1-3 L/min, target SpO2 88-92%), bronchodilators, pursed-lip breathing, tripod positioning.

Critical: High-flow oxygen can suppress respiratory drive in COPD patients.

Pneumonia

Signs: fever, productive cough, crackles, dyspnea, elevated WBC.

Care: antibiotics, oxygen, hydration, deep breathing, incentive spirometry.

Pulmonary Embolism

Signs: sudden dyspnea, chest pain, tachycardia, hypoxia, anxiety.

Treatment: anticoagulation (heparin), oxygen, supportive care. Massive PE may need thrombolytics.


Endocrine Emergencies

Diabetic Ketoacidosis (DKA)

Type 1 diabetes. Signs: hyperglycemia (>250), ketones, metabolic acidosis, Kussmaul respirations, fruity breath, dehydration.

Treatment: IV regular insulin, IV fluids, electrolyte correction (especially potassium), identify trigger.

Hyperosmolar Hyperglycemic State (HHS)

Type 2 diabetes. Severe hyperglycemia (>600) without significant ketosis. Profound dehydration. Treatment: aggressive IV fluids, insulin.

Thyroid Storm

Severe hyperthyroidism. Signs: high fever, tachycardia, hypertension, agitation. Treatment: beta-blockers, antithyroid drugs, supportive care.

Myxedema Coma

Severe hypothyroidism. Signs: hypothermia, bradycardia, altered mental status. Treatment: IV levothyroxine, warming, supportive care.

Addisonian Crisis

Adrenal insufficiency. Signs: hypotension, hyponatremia, hyperkalemia, hypoglycemia. Treatment: IV hydrocortisone, fluids, electrolyte correction.


Neurological Conditions

Stroke (CVA)

Ischemic: clot blocks blood flow. tPA within 4.5 hours (after ruling out hemorrhage with CT).

Hemorrhagic: bleeding. tPA contraindicated.

Assessment: BE FAST (Balance, Eyes, Face, Arms, Speech, Time).

Care: monitor neuro status, manage BP, prevent complications, swallow evaluation before oral intake.

Increased Intracranial Pressure (ICP)

Signs: Cushing's triad (hypertension with widening pulse pressure, bradycardia, irregular respirations), headache, vomiting, altered consciousness, pupil changes.

Care: elevate HOB 30 degrees, maintain neutral head position, avoid activities that increase ICP, possibly mannitol.

Seizures

Care: protect from injury, turn to side, do NOT restrain or insert objects in mouth, time the seizure, document.


Renal Conditions

Acute Kidney Injury (AKI)

Types: prerenal (decreased perfusion), intrarenal (kidney damage), postrenal (obstruction).

Care: monitor I&O, electrolytes (especially potassium), avoid nephrotoxic drugs (NSAIDs, contrast), possible dialysis.

Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)

Complications: anemia (decreased erythropoietin), bone disease, fluid overload, hyperkalemia, metabolic acidosis.

Care: renal diet (restrict potassium, phosphorus, sodium, protein), phosphate binders, erythropoietin, possible dialysis.


Shock (Critical Emergency)

Types:

  • Hypovolemic: fluid/blood loss
  • Cardiogenic: heart pump failure
  • Distributive: septic, anaphylactic, neurogenic
  • Obstructive: PE, cardiac tamponade

Universal signs: hypotension, tachycardia, weak pulse, cool clammy skin, oliguria, altered mental status, elevated lactate.

General treatment: identify and treat cause, IV fluids, vasopressors, oxygen, monitor hemodynamics.

Sepsis

Recognize early: fever, tachycardia, tachypnea, elevated WBC, elevated lactate.

Sepsis bundle: blood cultures, lactate, broad-spectrum antibiotics within 1 hour, 30 mL/kg fluid for hypotension/lactate >4, vasopressors if needed.


Practice Physiological Adaptation at LisensyaPrep

LisensyaPrep's NCLEX Quiz Module 4 contains 50 practice questions on Physiological Adaptation covering medical emergencies, electrolytes, and body system alterations.

Start Module 4: Physiological Adaptation Practice


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