Name 5 of the "rights of medication"...
What are right patient, medication, dose, time, route, documentation, reason, response, education, right to refuse.
Not MOI but....
What is shock?
When using a BVM, we look for this to determine if our ventilation are sufficient and effective.
What is chest rise and fall?
What is bronchospasm?
Which nervous system does Epinephrine act on and what is the adult dose for anaphylaxis?
What is the sympathetic nervous system and 0.3mg.
Scene safety, BSI, whats next?
What is, how many patients are there?
Type of shock that causes widespread vasodilation and loss of vascular tone.
What is distributive shock?
The difference between respiratory distress and respiratory failure.
What is distress is when the patient is compensating and failure is when breathing becomes inadequate to maintain homeostasis.
A pulmonary embolism (PE) creates what type of shock?
What is obstructive shock?
Name two contraindications for nitroglycerin.
What are hypotension and erectile dysfunction medications.
Parts of the primary assessment
What are, X(exsanguination/hemorrhage), A (airway), B (breathing), C (circulation)
Name 5 signs or symptoms of shock.
What are AMS, anxiety, agitation, restlessness, pale, cold or diaphoretic skin, tachycardia, tachypenea, hypotension.
A non-rebreather mask delivers what percentage of oxygen...
What is 90-95%?
Aspirin, what does it do? and how much do we give?
What is inhibits platelet aggregation and prostaglandin synthesis. 324mg total ( 4x 81mg chewable ASA)
Which medication administration route provides the fastest systemic absorption?
What is intravenous.
What is the definition of signs and symptoms...
What is signs are objective findings you obtain as a provider and symptoms are subjective as reported by the patient.
Severe blood loss can cause which type of shock
What is hypovolemic shock?
What is a nasal cannula at 1-6 liters per minute.
The pressure left remaining in the vascular system during ventricular relaxation?
What is diastole?
Your patient has ingested multiple poisonous medications, you may administer this...
What is activated charcoal.
What is 5 minutes for unstable and 15 minutes for stable patients.
How is shock treated?
What is treatment with oxygen, warmth and supportive care.
Breath sound is most commonly associated with fluid in the alveoli...
What are crackles (rales)?
Convert 50kg to pounds.
What is 110 pounds?
Remember, 1lb = 2.2kg.
Which adrenergic receptor does Albuterol affect and what does it do?
What are Beta-2 adrenergic receptors causing bronchodilation.
The study of have diseases affect the body is...
What is Pathophysiology.
How do you know when a patient enters an irreversible shock state?
What is you will not know until it is too late. Early recognition and aggressive shock management is essential.
To use CPAP a patient must be able to...
What is maintain their own airway?
What is the pulmonary artery?