The Human Body
Ggenerall Knowledge
Medical legal and ethical issues
Medical
Terms
Life Span Development
100

The bones of the fingers and toes. 

Phalanges

100

A microorganism that is capable of causing disease in a susceptible host.

Pathogen

100

Unilateral termination of care by the EMT without the patient consent and without making provisions for transferring care to another medical professional with skills and training necessary to meet the needs of the patient. 

Abandonment

100

Excessive vomiting.

Hyperemesis

100

Pressure induced trauma.

Barotrauma

200

The crackling sound produced by air bubbles under the skin. 

Subcutaneous emphysema

200

The use of an animal to spray an organism from one person or place to another.

Vector-borne transmission

200

A lovely place in a patient in fear of bodily harm. 

Assault

200

Position where the body is lying face down

Prone

200

A person 12 to 18 years old.

Adolescent

300

A pressure wave through the arteries caused by cardiac contraction creates a:

Palpable pulse

300

Exposure or transmission of a disease from one person to another by contact with a contaminated object.

Indirect contact

300

Unlawfully touching a patient or providing emergency care without consent.

Battery

300

Above or over the sternum.

Suprasternal 

300

A reflex that occurs when something touches an infant’s cheek, and the infant instinctively turns his or her head towards the touch. 

Rooting Reflex

400

Heart rate of more than 100 bpm.

Tachycardia

400

The body’s ability to protect itself from acquiring a disease.

Immunity

400

Blood settling to the lowest point of the body, causing discoloration of the skin, a definitive sign of death.

Dependent lividity

400

Paralysis on one side of the body.

Hemiplegia

400

Older adults refers to what age and over?

61 years and over. 

500

The portion of the skeletal system that comprises the arms, legs, pelvis, and shoulder girdle. 

Appendicular skeleton

500

A situation in which a person has had contact with blood body, fluids, tissues, or airborne particles, and a matter that suggests disease transmission may occur. 

Exposure

500

The medical term relating to certain personnel who either by statute or by function, have a responsibility to provide care.

Duty to act

500

Fluid accumulating in the lungs. 

Pulmonary edema

500

Areas where the neonate’s skull has not fused together.

Fontenelles

600

The largest part of the three subdivisions of the brain, sometimes called the gray matter; made up of special lobes that control movement, hearing, balance, speech, visual perception, emotions, and personality. 

Cerebrum

600

The  nucleotide involvement in energy metabolism; used to store energy

Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP)

600

A type of consent in which a patient gives verbal or non-verbal authorization for provision of care or transport.

Expressed consent

600

Disease of the kidney.

Nephropathy

600

A toddler’s age range. 

1 to 3 years old

700

Fluid produced in the ventricles of the brain that flows in the subarachnoid space and bathes the meninges. 

Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)

700

The concept of consistent patient care across the entire healthcare team from first patient contact to patient discharge 

Continuum of care

700

Permission for treatment given by a competent patient after the potential risks, benefits, and alternatives to treatment have been explained.

Informed consent

700

Refers to the belly side of the body or the anterior surface. 

Ventral

700

A condition characterized by the buildup of cholesterol and calcium along the wall of blood vessels. 

Atherosclerosis

800

This is calculated by multiplying stroke volume by heart rate.

Cardiac Output

800

Signs and symptoms that the patient does not have. 

Pertinent Negatives

800

When a person who has a duty abuses it and causes harm to another individual, the EMT, the agency and or the medical Director may be sued for an negligence.

Proximate causation

800

Pregnant for the first time.

Primigravida

800

These filters blood within the kidney.

Nephrons

900

Large opening in the inferior portion of the occipital bone. 

Foramen Magnum

900

The forces or energy transmission, applied to the body that causes injury. 

Mechanism of injury (MOI)

900

Written, accepted, levels of emergency care expected by reason of training and profession; written by legal or professional organizations so that patients are not exposed to unreasonable risk or harm. 

Standard of care

900

On or affecting the same side.

Ipsilateral

900

A type of reasoning in which a child acts almost purely to avoid punishment or to get or he or she wants. 

Preconventional Reasoning

1000

Thin bands of fibrous tissue that attached to the valves in the heart and prevent them from inverting.

Chordae Tendineae

1000

The average pressure in the circulatory system doing one cardiac cycle. 

Mean Arterial Pressure (MAP)

1000

Conduct that constitutes a willful or reckless disregard for a duty or standard of care.

Gross negligence

1000

Area behind the peritoneum.

Retroperitoneal

1000

Occurs when a newborn is startled, where they open their arms wide, spread their fingers and appear to be grabbing for something

Moro Reflex

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