Excessive BVM ventilation can reduce cardiac output by increasing this.
What is intrathoracic pressure?
What is the heart's natural pacemaker?
What is the SA Node?
A patient with vomiting, diarrhea, and poor oral intake is at risk for this shock state due to loss of circulating fluid volume.
What is Hypovolemic Shock?
What are the 5 components of the APGAR score?
Appearance
Pulse
Grimace
Activity
Respirations
This is the first impression tool used to rapidly assess appearance, work of breathing, and circulation to the skin.
What is the Pediatric Assessment Triangle?
A severe asthma patient who becomes sleepy, slows their respiratory rate, and has rising EtCO₂ is most likely developing this.
What is respiratory failure?
Which lead grouping is associated with the Right Coronary Artery?
What are Leads II, III, and aVF?
This life-threatening thyroid emergency may present with fever, tachycardia, agitation, altered mental status, vomiting, diarrhea, and possible heart failure.
What is Thyroid Storm?
What is the ventilation rate for newborn resuscitation?
What is 40-60 breaths per minute?
This is the preferred initial fluid bolus for many pediatric patients in shock.
What is 20 mL/kg of isotonic crystalloid?
Nitroglycerin can improve hypertensive pulmonary edema by reducing these two cardiovascular components.
What are preload and afterload?
What ECG change indicates Hypothermia?
What is an Osborn Wave?
Hypertension, bradycardia, and irregular respirations, a pattern that's known by this name.
What is Cushing's Triad?
What medication is given for eclampsia? What's the dose?
What is Magnesium Sulfate? 2g.
This is the most common cause of pediatric cardiac arrest.
What is Respiratory Failure?
A pulmonary embolism can cause this type of shock.
What is obstructive?

What is Wandering Atrial Pacemaker?
What are the 3 indications to administer Sodium Bicarb?
What are TCA Overdose, Profound Acidosis, Hyperkalemia?
What is the difference between pre-eclampsia and eclampsia?
What are seizures?
What is the first pharmacological intervention for symptomatic bradycardia?
This type of heart failure most commonly causes pulmonary edema.
What is left sided heart failure?
What term describes medications that change conduction velocity?
What is dromotropic?
This toxicologic condition presents with salivation, lacrimation, urination, diarrhea, GI upset, emesis, bronchorrhea, bradycardia, miosis, and muscle fasciculations.
What is organophosphate poisoning or cholinergic toxicity?
This infection of the female reproductive organs may cause pelvic pain, fever, discharge, and cervical motion tenderness.
What is Pelvic Inflammatory Disease?
What is the cardiogenic shock fluid dosage?
What is 5-10 mL/kg?