Medications
Labs
Patient education
Interventions
MISC.
100

Medications used to treat anaphylactic shock

What is epinephrine and benadryl? 

100

Normal INR

1 normally, 2-3 is therapeutic range

100

Which hormones are responsible for bloating? Which are high/low?

What is high estrogen and low progesterone?
100

What is the first thing you do for a patient in schock?

Give them IV fluid bolus

100

What is the biggest concern in DIC?

Risk for bleeding d/t using up all of your clotting factors 

200

What medication is used to treat BV?

What is Flagyl?
200

What are bands?

What are immature neutrophils?

200

What is the most common vaginal infection in women?

What is BV?

200

What would you do for a patient with circumfrential burns to the chest?

Preform an Escharotomy to help with ventilation.
200

What are the SIRS criteria?

WBC greater than 12,000 or less than 4,000

Temp greater than 38 or less than 36

Tachypnea or PaCo2 less than 32

HR greater than 90 

10% or more bands

300

What is the medication sequence for a patient with A-fib?

Beta blockers, then CCB and then Amioderone

300

Which labs are elevated in a patient with an MI? And what are the ranges?

BNP greater than 100 and Troponin greater than 0.04 ng

300

What type of diet would you reccomend for a patient with acute pancreatitis?

Low fat high carb diet

300

What is the most common intevention with bowel obstructions?

NG tube decompression

300

During the emergent phase of burns the patient is at the greatest risk for?

What is hypovolemic shock? related to loss of fluids and proteins due a massive protein shift out of the blood vessels.
400

Which medication binds to ammonia to help the patient excrete it via the bowels?

What is Lactulose?
400

Which neurological condition presents with increased serum osmolarity and hyponatremia?

What is Syndrome of Inappropriate ADH (SIADH)

400

What kind of renal injury can be cause by contrast dyes?

What is Intrarenal kidney injury?

400

Which metabolic condition do you give bicarb? And what is the range for administration?

What is DKA with a pH of less than 6.9
400

What are the 6P's in compartment syndrome?

Pain, Pallor, pressure, pulselessness, parasthesia, paralysis, (poikilothermia)

500

Which 3 medications are given for a patient with increased ICP?

What is Manitol, Hypertonic saline, and  corticosteroids?

500

A patient has hyperkalemia, what acid base imbalance are they experiencing?

What is Metabolic Alkalosis? 

.... remember hydrogen influx drives potassium out of the cell and vice versa

500

What are 3 clinical signs of bacterial meningitis? (NEED ALL 3)

Nuchal rigidity

Positive Kernigs sign

Positive Brudzinkis sign 

500

What procedure is used to remove abnormal cells from your cervix?

What is a LEEP procedure?

500
At what spinal cord injury level is the patient at an increased risk for autonomic dysreflexia? And what is Autonomic dysreflexia?
What is a T6 spinal injury?
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