CCRN format

Specialties CCU

Published

Is the CCRN exam set up similar to the NCLEX, where the computer adjusts the difficulty of your questions based on your answers? Or is it just a set 150 questions, with a set percentage of questions for each body system (I forget what the breakdown is, but I know a very large portion is cardiac/pulmonary)?

Specializes in MICU/CICU/Currently CVR.

Okay, somebody shoot me if I'm wrong (been a while since I took it)....I believe it was a set number of questions. Different percentage of questions for each organ system/disease process. Cardiac has something like 37% of the test questions with pulmonary only having around 17%. (again, shoot me if I'm wrong...:D) The only similarity between the CCRN and the NCLEX that I remember is that they're both on computer.... The questions were hard to start with and they stayed that way through the entire test.

Was a pain in the posterior to take but totally do-able...

Good luck

KC :specs:

Specializes in Travel Nursing, ICU, tele, etc.

the ccrn is 150 questions, with 25 of those questions not graded. here is the breakdown: (from aacn.org)

adult ccrn test plan

i. clinical judgment (80%)

a. cardiovascular (32%)

1. acute coronary syndromes/unstable angina

2. acute heart failure/pulmonary edema

3. acute inflammatory disease (e.g., myocarditis, endocarditis, pericarditis)

4. acute myocardial infarction/papillary muscle rupture

5. acute peripheral vascular insufficiency (e.g., acute arterial occlusion, carotid artery stenosis, endartarectomy, peripheral stents)

6. cardiac surgery (e.g., valve replacement, cabg)

7. cardiac tamponade

8. cardiac trauma (blunt and penetrating)

9. cardiogenic shock

10. cardiomyopathies (e.g., hypertrophic, dilated, restrictive, idiopathic)

11. cardiovascular pharmacology

12. conduction defects, blocks and pacemakers

13. dysrhythmias/aicds

14. heart failure

15. hemodynamic monitoring

16. hypertensive crisis

17. hypovolemic shock and volume deficit

18. pulmonary hypertension(e.g., valvular defects, aortic stenosis, mitral stenosis)

19. ruptured or dissecting aneurysm (e.g., thoracic, abdominal)

b. pulmonary (17%)

1. acute pulmonary embolus, fat embolus

2. acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards)

3. acute respiratory failure, hypoxemia

4. acute respiratory infections

5. air-leak syndromes (e.g., spontaneous pneumothorax, pneumopericardium, pneumomediastinum, pie)

6. aspirations (e.g., aspiration pneumonia, hospital acquired pneumonia, foreign-body aspiration)

7. chronic lung disease

8. pulmonary pharmacology

9. pulmonary trauma (e.g., pulmonary hemorrhage, tracheal perforation)

10. respiratory distress (e.g., emphysema, bronchitis)

11. status asthmaticus, exacerbation of copd, emphysema

12. thoracic surgery (e.g., lung contusions, fractured ribs, hemothorax, pulmonary hemorrhage, lung reduction, pneumonectomy, lobectomy, tracheal surgery)

13. thoracic trauma (e.g., lung contusions, fractured ribs, hemothorax, pneumothorax from trauma, pulmonary hemorrhage)

14. ventilator management and abg interpretation, mixed venous gases, cpap, volutrauma and barotraumas

c. endocrine (4%)

1. acute hypoglycemia

2. diabetes insipidus

3. diabetic ketoacidosis

4. hormones and endocrine anatomy and physiology

5. hyperglycemic hyperosmolar nonketotic coma (hhnk)

d. hematology/immunology (3%)

1. hematology, anatomy and physiology, blood products and plasma

2. immunosuppression-acquired (e.g., hiv, aids, neoplasms)

3. life-threatening coagulopathies (e.g., itp, dic, hemophilia, hitts, reopro-induced) and non life-threatening coagulopathies

4. organ transplantation (e.g., liver, bone marrow, kidney, heart, pancreas, lung)

5. sickle cell crisis

e. neurology (5%)

1. aneurysm, av malformation

2. encephalopathy (e.g., hypoxic-ischemic, metabolic, edema, infectious)

3. head trauma (blunt, penetrating), skull fractures

4. intracranial hemorrhage/intraventricular hemorrhage (e.g., subarachnoid, epidural, subdural)

5. neurologic infectious diseases (e.g., meningitis, gbs, west nile)

6. icp monitoring

7. neurosurgery (e.g., evacuation of hematoma, tumor resection)

8. seizure disorders

9. stroke (e.g., embolic events, hemorrhagic)

f. gastrointestinal (6%)

1. acute abdominal trauma

2. acute gi hemorrhage (e.g., esophageal, upper and lower)

3. bowel infarction, bowel obstruction, bowel perforation

4. gi surgeries (e.g., whipple, esophago-gastrectomy, gastric bypass)

5. hepatic failure/coma (e.g., portal hypertension,

cirrhosis, esophageal varicies, fulminant hepatitis)

6. pancreatitis

7. gastro-esophageal reflux

g. renal (5%)

1. acute renal failure (e.g., acute tubular necrosis, hypoxia, dialysis)

2. chronic renal failure and dialysis

3. life-threatening electrolyte imbalances (e.g.,

potassium, sodium, phosphorus, magnesium, calcium)

4. fluid balance concepts and renal anatomy & physiology

5. renal trauma

h. multisystem (8%)

1. multisystem trauma

2. septic shock/infectious diseases (e.g., viral, bacterial, line sepsis, nosocomial infections, immunosuppression)

3. systemic inflammatory response syndrome (sirs)/sepsis/mods

4. toxic exposure (e.g., chemicals, radiation, anaphylaxis)

5. toxic ingestions and inhalations (e.g., drug/alcohol overdose, poisoning)

ii. professional caring and ethical practice (20%)

a. advocacy/moral agency (2%)

b. caring practices (4%)

c. collaboration (4%)

d. systems thinking (2%)

e. response to diversity (2%)

f. clinical inquiry (2%)

g. facilitation of learning (4%)

i don't think there is adjustment for difficulty or missed questions, but that is something you could certainly ask the aacn. they are a very supportive organization. check out their website, they even have sample questions and lots more info on the exam.

hey, check out the sticky thread on this forum for the ccrn. we have great tips for study material and it is empowering to use the thread as an on-line study group, even if you don't take the ccrn for a while.

:nuke::nuke::nuke:

Specializes in Cardiac.

deeDawn, you are the CCRN guru!

I took it in late October. It is 125 to 150 questions, with 25 of them not graded (experimental). You CAN skip over questions and then go back to them later. The computer doesn't adjust each individual question based on how you've answered like the NCLEX does. It gives you questions drawn randomly from the set of all possible questions. They must have a difficulty rating on them of some sort, because the computer tells you that you will have fewer questions if you have harder ones and more if you have easier ones. Personally, I found some of them insanely easy and some quite hard. I passed, by the way. I just think that some of them (probably the experimental ones) are not always worded for maximum clarity.

Specializes in Travel Nursing, ICU, tele, etc.
deeDawn, you are the CCRN guru!

hehe!!! ooooohhhhmmmmm.......

Specializes in Travel Nursing, ICU, tele, etc.
i took it in late october. it is 125 to 150 questions, with 25 of them not graded (experimental). you can skip over questions and then go back to them later. the computer doesn't adjust each individual question based on how you've answered like the nclex does. it gives you questions drawn randomly from the set of all possible questions. they must have a difficulty rating on them of some sort, because the computer tells you that you will have fewer questions if you have harder ones and more if you have easier ones. personally, i found some of them insanely easy and some quite hard. i passed, by the way. i just think that some of them (probably the experimental ones) are not always worded for maximum clarity.

congratulations!!!! lizk!!

way to go!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Just took ccrn and failed it I used pass ccrn cd and was getting 80-85% on it so thought I was prepared. I was wrong what the cd concentrated on wasn't on the exam. It was harder than expected. Thinkin of taking it again but wondering if anyone know the chances of getting the same test. How does it work how many formats of test are there. Wasn't like I bombed it but I found myself guessing a lot. Now I can't face my coworkers help ?

Specializes in critical care: trauma/oncology/burns.

Diannrn:

As another poster stated, try to concentrate on your score report....look at your low percentages and concentrate on those areas that you are weak in.

I wish I could offer more....and easy for me to say get right back on that horse and take the exam again. I am, by no means, a great test-taker which has been my downfall for most of my nursing career. But I must say the CCRN, although hard, will test your book knowledge more than your clinical knowledge.

I also used the Dennison CD and I also went over the Gasparis Vonfrolio DVDs. I had to teach myself NOT TO CHANGE MY ANSWER. That, for me, was the hardest part. Every time when doing the PASS CCRN practice cd I changed an answer I changed it from correct to incorrect. I also had to teach myself not to read into the question. Not to think ahead or outside the "question" box. I passed the CCRN last week, but I have failed exams in the past, and easy for me to say to you try not to feel ashamed or embarrassed. You've taken it once, now you kind of know what to expect.

athena

Specializes in CVICU, ICU, RRT, CVPACU.

Watch the Laura Gasparis disks and you will be fine. If you have worked the required amount of time to take the CCRN and watched the disks it really isnt that difficult.

I listed to the laura vonfrolio cd's to and from work for about 2 months and did the pass ccrn cd questions about once a week, then the 5 days before the exam and i passed. I took the new updated version with all the psychological stuff on it!

hopefulnurse84 ....i just sent you a pm. please check it.
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