What are capillary samples?
How often the PCT must check restraints on patients who are restrained.
What is every fifteen minutes?
Fibrilation
What is a rapid and inconsistent pulse?
This is the segment between the QRS complex and the next peak.
What is the ST segment?
Devices using occasional compression to prevent unwanted blood clots from forming.
What are sequential compression devices?
This amount of urine is used for urinalysis.
What is 30 mLs?
What is the trendelenburg position?
The trendelenburg position is where the patient is position with the head below the feet, lying on their back.
Somatic tremors
The standard rate for EKG machines.
What is 25 mm per second?
A surgical opening to access someone's organs, often the colon.
What is an Ostom?
This is what gold tubes contain.
What is serum?
The position where the patient isn't fully sitting up, but is at about 45 degrees give or take.
What is the semi fowler's position?
Atrial flutter
What are regular and consistent flutters of the P wave from the atrium?
What are V leads?
The process of recording where potential court relevant evidence travels and with whom.
What is the chain of custody?
This is the order of draw for dermal samples by color.
What is lavender, light blue, green, grey, gold, red?
the three main levels of weight bearing.
What are full, partial, and non?
This is the definition of syncope.
What is temporarily passing out due to drop in blood pressure?
The location of the black lead on a standard 5 lead setup.
What is the upper left quadrant?
The stage of the pressure where skin is completely eroded.
What is stage 3?
The additives added to light blue, purple, and red tubes respectively.
What are sodium citrate, EDTA, and clotting activator.
This vital sign is completed first for infants.
What is the O2 sat?
EDTA
An anticoagulant added to phlebotomy tubes to prevent premature clotting of the blood
What is the lower right quadrant?
What are between 70 and 99 mg/dL when fasting, and 1-2 hours after eating, below 140 mg/d