Emergency Triage
Myocardial Infarction
Spinal Cord Injury
Stroke
Misc.
100

Initial identification of treatment and life threatening injury

 What is primary survey

100

Umbrella term used to describe NSTEMI and STEMI

What is acute coronary syndrome

100

Most common spinal cord injury; due to hyperextension or hyperflexion with resultant edema at the center of the spinal cord results in this loss

What are loss of motor and sensory greater in the upper extremities than lower.

100

This condition symptoms may last for minutes or hours, then resolve

What is TIA or Transient Ischemic Attack

100

General marker for cellular injury, released when skeletal muscle, brain, or cardiac tissue is damaged

What is CK or creatine Kinase

200

Critical time between when injury occurse and when treatment is initiated

What is "Golden Hour"

200

Partial blockage without heart muscle death, no evidence of cardiac markers, transient st changes

What is unstable angina

200

Penetrating injury to the spinal cord, hyperextension or disc herniation

What is Brown- Sequard Syndrome

200

Sudden blockage of cerebral blood vessel causes reduction of supply of oxygenated blood to the region of the brain fed by the involved artery

What is an Ischemic Stroke

200

The nurse understands PCI stands for

What is Percutaneous Coronary Intervention

300

The RN understands that these 5 assessments are involved in the primary survey upon triage of an emergent patient condition

What are: 

"airway, breathing, circulation, disability, and exposure"

300

Partial blockage of a major vessel OR complete blockage of a minor vessel; causing partial heart muscle damage.

NSTEMI

300

injury or ischemia to the posterior spinal cord due to cervical hyperextension 

What is Posterior Cord Syndrome

300

Stroke symptoms related to this artery include: dizziness, ataxia, n/v, difficulty swallowing and managing secretions

What is Basilar Artery

300

JVD, hypotension, brady, n/v ( mimics right hear failure)

What is RCA or Right Coronary Artery

400

This rigid object is used in an unconsious patient only, to relieve tongue obstruction  prior to placement of Endotracheal Tube

What is an oropharyngeal airway

400

Cardiac specific lab test, may stay elevated for this many days post cardiac event

What is Troponin; 10 days

400

Immediately after injury; loss of reflex, sensory, motor below level of injury, hypotension results, last 24 hrs to 6 weeks

What is spinal shock

400

Door to puncture time for endovascular intervention

What is 90 minutes

400

Comprehensive re-examination of patient, usually within 24 hours after admission, to identify any injuries that may have been missed.

What is Tertiary Survey

500

A nurse is performing primary survey on a patient who presents with no eye response, incoherent verbal response, and flexion to pain ( decorticate). The nurse documents the GCS score of ......

What is 5

500

Door to balloon time if interventional cardiac services are available

What is 90 minutes

500
Can lead to organ dysfunction and death; occurs with brain, cervical or upper thoracic injuries; results in bradycardia and hypotension

What is Neurogenic Shock

500

4 risk factors for Hemorrhagic Stroke

Smoking, heavy alcohol use, HTN, sympathetic nervous system stimulants

500

This level of spinal cord injury is highest risk for respiratory compromise

What is Cervical

600

The lethal combination of hypothermia, metabolic acidosis, and hypothermia

What is Trauma Triad of Death

600

5 medications for administration during an acute cardiac event

What are Morphine, Nitro, Heparin, Beta blocker, Aspirin.

600

Strong sensory input ( distended bladder, constipation, pain)  can cause this condition

What is Autonomic Dysreflexia

600

The acronym BEFAST

What is balance, eys, face, arms, speech, time
600

Damage to Sclera after blunt or penetrating trauma. Leading cause of trauma related blindness

What is Globe Rupture

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