"Take My Breath Away" (Acute Respiratory Failure & ARDS)
The Not-So-Fun Chest Bumps" (Chest Trauma)
"Lunges for Lungs" (Pulmonary Embolism)
"Just Breathe" (Ventilation & Oxygen Therapy)Enter Category Name
"ER Nightmare Scenarios" (Critical Situations & Emergencies)
200

This blood gas value is dangerously low in oxygenation failure

What is PaO₂ < 60 mmHg?

200

The most commonly fractured ribs

What are ribs 5-9?

200

The most common cause of a pulmonary embolism.

What is a blood clot (thrombus)?

200

This device provides continuous positive airway pressure for non-invasive
ventilation

What is a CPAP

200

A patient presents with sudden dyspnea, chest pain, and hemoptysis. The nurse
suspects this

What is a pulmonary embolism?

400

This inflammatory condition floods the alveoli and leads to stiff lungs

What is ARDS?

400

A condition where multiple rib fractures cause paradoxical chest movement.

What is flail chest?

400

A D-dimer test detects this in the blood.

What are fibrin degradation products?

400

The primary goal of oxygen therapy

What is to correct hypoxemia

400

A post-op patient’s SpO₂ drops to 80% despite oxygen therapy. This emergency
intervention is likely needed

What is intubation and mechanical ventilation

600

A sign of respiratory distress where the patient is only able to speak 2 words
before taking a breath

What is 2 word dyspnea?

600

This life-threatening condition shifts the mediastinum due to trapped air

What is tension pneumothorax?

600

This imaging test is the most commonly used and preferred method for
diagnosing a pulmonary embolism, requiring IV contrast to visualize blood flow in the
lungs

What is a spiral CT?

600

A term for positive pressure maintained at the end of expiration

What is PEEP (Positive End-Expiratory Pressure)

600

A trauma patient has a deviated trachea and absent breath sounds on one side. This
is the priority intervention

What is an emergency needle decompression?

800

The most common cause of ARDS

What is sepsis?

800

The emergency treatment for an open "sucking" chest wound.

What is a vent dressing?

800

The immediate first-line medication treatment for PE

What is anticoagulation (heparin or warfarin)

800

A mechanically ventilated patient develops fever, purulent sputum, crackles, and
an elevated WBC count. To reduce the risk of this complication, nurses should
implement this set of interventions

What is the VAP Bundle?

800

A ventilated patient suddenly develops subcutaneous emphysema and
hypotension. This complication is suspected.

What is barotrauma (from excessive PEEP)

1000

This non-supine positioning strategy improves oxygenation in ARDS patients

What is the prone position?

1000

While assessing a patient’s chest tube, the nurse notices continuous bubbling in
the water seal chamber. This indicates the presence of this complication.

What is an air leak?

1000

A patient arrives at the ER with sudden-onset dyspnea, chest pain, and
tachycardia. The nurse also notes hypotension, altered mental status, and a sense of
impending doom. These findings suggest this life-threatening complication of a
pulmonary embolism

What is a obstructive shock

1000

The recommended action when a ventilator alarm goes off

What is assess the patient first, then check the ventilator?

1000

A patient on anticoagulants suddenly becomes confused with a tachycardia and
hypotension. The nurse suspects this

What is a shock

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