Airway Management
Casualty Assessment
TCCC Concepts
Shock and Resuscitation
Thoracic Trauma
Evacuation / Medevac
Interventions
100

How long should you suction an airway?

15 seconds

100

What are the three phases of TCCC?

Care Under Fire, Tactical Field Care, Tactical Evacuation Care

100

What is the leading cause of preventable battlefield death?

Hemorrhage

100

Is cardiogenic shock a hose, pump, or tank failure?

Pump

100

What is the initial treatment for an open chest wound?

Occlusive chest seal

100

Opening statement for any medevac request is?

“I have a medevac request”

100

TXA must be given within how many hours of injury?

3 hours

200

What is the preferred airway adjunct in combat and why?

NPA – better tolerated and less likely to dislodge

200

What is the first medical priority during Care Under Fire?

Control massive hemorrhage

200

What type of trauma is most common in combat?

Penetrating trauma

200

What is a primary heart complication seen in neurogenic shock?

Bradycardia

200

When should thoracic injuries be treated in TCCC? (phase and step)

Tactical Field Care during Respirations

200

Casualties are loaded in what orientation while on an ambulance?

Head first to reduce further injury

200

TXA dose and route?

2g IV over 1–2 minutes

300

During what phase of care is airway first fully managed?

Tactical Field Care

300

Medevac (blank) as soon as a medic receives a casualty?

Begins

300

What is the single biggest obstacle to providing battlefield care?

Enemy fire 

300

What is the estimated systolic BP if a radial pulse is present?

~80 mmHg

300

What two findings suggest a tension pneumothorax in combat?

Torso trauma + progressive respiratory distress

300

Normal UH60 patient load?

4 litter and 1 ambulatory patient

300

What is the corrective action if a tourniquet is placed and radial pulses return?

Tighten the tourniquet

400

What is the preferred advanced airway in a combat environment?

Surgical cricothyroidotomy

400

What are the three goals of TCCC?

Complete the mission, prevent additional casualties, treat casualties

400

What percentage of penetrating head/neck injuries require spinal immobilization?

~1.4%

400

What is the fluid of choice for burn trauma?

Lactated Ringer’s

400

What is the next step after chest seal if respiratory distress worsens?

Needle decompression

400

What are the four components of MEDEVAC?

Collect, triage, transport, treat en route

400

What is your formula for drops per minute?

Volume × gtts ÷ time (minutes)

500

What is the minimum tube size required for adequate oxygenation in an adult surgical airway?

6 mm

500

Why must correct interventions be timed appropriately in combat?

Wrong timing can cause additional casualties due to tactical risk

500

Why is CPR generally not performed on traumatic arrest in combat? (2 Primary Reasons)

Extremely low survival and increases risk to providers/mission

500

After IV infusion, a patient develops SOB, JVD, tachycardia, and elevated BP—what is the likely issue?

Circulatory overload

500

What is the definitive treatment for pneumothorax?

Chest tube

500

What is the difference between MEDEVAC and CASEVAC?

MEDEVAC = dedicated medical platform with personnel
CASEVAC = non-medical transport with limited care

500

What are the 9-line CBRN Brevity Codes?

N - Nuclear, B - Biological, C - Chemical

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