The life of Brain
No its not the Breaststroke
Negative I am not a Popsicle
EMTs do it in the Field
That's not a Vegetable, That's my husband
100

Describe the anatomy, physiology, and

functions of the brain and spinal cord.


(pp 724–726)

100

List three conditions with symptoms that

mimic stroke and the assessment techniques

EMTs may use to identify them. 

(p 731)

100

Explain the postictal state and the specific

patient care interventions that may be

necessary. 

(p 735)

100

Explain the primary assessment of a patient

who is experiencing a neurologic emergency

and the necessary interventions that may be

required to address all life threats.

(pp 738–739)

100

Explain the concept of a stroke alert and the

important time frame for the most successful

treatment outcome for a patient who is

suspected of having a stroke. 

(pp 745–746)

200

Discuss the different types of headaches, the

possible causes of each, and how to distinguish

a harmless headache from a potentially life-

threatening condition. 

(pp 726–727)

200

Define a general seizure, focal-onset seizure,

and status epilepticus; include how they differ

from each other and their effects on patients.


(pp 732–733)

200

Define altered mental status; include possible

causes and the patient assessment considera-

tions that apply to each.

 (pp 735–737, 749)

200

Describe the process of history taking for

a patient who is experiencing a neurologic

emergency and how this process varies

depending on the nature of the patient’s illness.


(pp 739–741)

200

List the key information EMTs must obtain

and document for a stroke patient during

assessment and reassessment. 

(pp 741–745)

300

Explain the various ways blood flow to

the brain may be interrupted and cause a

cerebrovascular accident. 

(pp 727–728)

300

Describe how the different stages of a seizure

are characterized. 

(p 733)

300

Discuss scene safety considerations when

responding to a patient with a neurologic

emergency. 

(pp 737–738)

300

Explain the secondary assessment of a patient

who is experiencing a neurologic emergency.


(pp 741–744)

300

Explain the care, treatment, and transport of

patients who are experiencing headaches,

stroke, seizure, and altered mental status.


(pp 745–749)

400

Discuss the causes, similarities, and differences

of an ischemic stroke, hemorrhagic stroke, and

transient ischemic attack. 

(pp 728–730)

400

Discuss the importance for EMTs to recognize

when a seizure is occurring or whether one has

already occurred in a patient.

(pp 734–735)

400

Explain the special considerations required for

pediatric patients who exhibit altered mental

status.

 (p 737)

400

Explain how to use stroke assessment tools

to rapidly identify a stroke patient; include two

commonly used tools.

 (pp 741–744)

400

Explain the special considerations required

for geriatric patients who are experiencing a

neurologic emergency. 

(p 747)

500

List the general signs and symptoms of stroke

and how those symptoms manifest if the

left hemisphere of the brain is affected and if

the right hemisphere of the brain is affected.


(pp 730–731)

500

A 68-year-old male presents with sudden onset slurred speech and right-sided facial droop. His wife states symptoms began 20 minutes ago. He is conscious and breathing normally.

What is your priority action?

A. Administer aspirin
B. Perform a Cincinnati Prehospital Stroke Scale
C. Give oxygen via nonrebreather
D. Transport without assessment

Correct Answer: B

Rationale:
You need to identify a stroke quickly using a validated tool like the Cincinnati Stroke Scale (facial droop, arm drift, speech). Early recognition activates stroke care pathways. Aspirin is not given in suspected stroke prehospital because it could be a hemorrhagic stroke.

500

A 72-year-old female has left arm weakness and confusion. Symptoms started 1 hour ago. Blood glucose is 110 mg/dL. Vital signs are stable.

What is the most appropriate destination decision?

A. Closest hospital regardless of capability
B. Delay transport for detailed neurological exam
C. Transport to a stroke center if available
D. Administer glucose and reassess


Correct Answer: C

Rationale:
Stroke is time-critical (“time is brain”). Patients within the treatment window should go to a designated stroke centerfor possible thrombolytics or intervention. Glucose is normal, so no need to treat hypoglycemia.

500

You respond to a 60-year-old diabetic with altered mental status and right-sided weakness. Blood glucose reads 42 mg/dL.

What should you do first?

A. Activate stroke alert
B. Administer oral glucose or IV dextrose
C. Perform a full stroke scale
D. Transport immediately


Correct Answer: B

Rationale:
Hypoglycemia can mimic stroke symptoms. Always check glucose early. Correcting low blood sugar may completely resolve symptoms, avoiding a false stroke activation.

500

Demonstrate how to use a stroke assessment

tool such as the Cincinnati Prehospital Stroke

Scale, 3-Item Stroke Severity Scale (LAG),

or BE-FAST mnemonic to test a patient for

aphasia, facial weakness, and motor weakness.


(pp 741–745)

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