Shock
Airway Emergencies
Patient Assessment
Medical Emergencies
Random
100

Inadequate cell perfusion.

What is Shock?

100

Process in which molecules move from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration.

What is diffusion?

100

Always ensure scene safety, determine the mechanism of injury or nature of illness, take standard precautions, determine the number of patients, and consider what additional help will be required.

What is Scene Size-up?

100

Assessment that focuses on the symptoms and the patient's chief complaint.

What is Nature of Illness (NOI)?

100

The patient has a complaint of shortness of breath or difficulty breathing, also know as....

What is dyspnia?

200

A balance of all systems of the body.

What is Homeostasis?

200

Nasopharynx, oropharynx, and laryngopharynx.

What is the Pharynx?

200

Paying attention of the conditions and the people around you at all times and potential risks those conditions or people pose.

What is situational awareness?

200

This decision is made following the primary assessment and includes determining whether to call for ALS.

What is the transport decision?

200

The exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide is also known as...

What is respiration?

300

The circulation of blood to the tissues in adequate amounts to meet the cells' needs.

What is Perfusion?

300

Taking energy from nutrients through a series of chemical processes. The cells combines nutrients and oxygen to produce the energy in the form of adenosine triphosphate and waste products, mostly water and carbon dioxide.

What is the metabolism?

300

Distracting injuries may prevent patients from reliably identifying neck or back pain associated with an unstable fracture at times may distract from identifying a serious MOI or life threatening condition.

What is tunnel vision?

300
Careful examination of the head to toe of the patient. May not always be possible on an extremely critical patient. 

What is the Secondary Assessment?

300

Flushed skin or hives, generalized edema, hypotension, dyspnea, wheezing or stridor are signs and symptoms.

What is Anaphylaxis?

400

Tension pneumothorax, cardiac tamponade, and pulmonary embolism are examples of this type of shock.

What is Cardiogenic/Obstructive Shock?

400

When the body cannot meet the metabolic demands of the cell.

What is the anaerobic metabolism?

400

Can be identified by reduced tidal volume or poor chest excursion. 

What is shallow respirations?

400

You should always take it if you have taken a blood pressure with an automatic cuff?

What is a manual blood pressure?

400

When carbon dioxide levels become elevated, the respiratory centers in the brain adjust the drive to compensate.

What is ventilation?

500

The last measurable factor to change in shock.

What is blood pressure?

500

Recent research has shown that although the administration of oxygen benefits many patients and is rarely problematic, high concentrations of oxygen are potentially harmful for a select population. This refers to the damage of the cellular tissue due to excessive oxygen levels in the blood.

What is Oxygen Toxicity?

500

The initial assessment, intervention, and packaging of a patient within the golden hour.

What is The Platinum 10 Minutes?

500

The patient has a cough and you are concerned of infected droplets in the air exposing you to contagions. You decided to don this PPE.

What is an N95 or HEPA mask and eye protection?

500

Underventilation and overventilation will cause harmful alterations in the pH, increased thoracic pressure, impaired venous return, hypotension, as well as this in the blood....

What is carbon dioxide?

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