Dyspnea Evaluation
Severe Asthma Exacerbation
Pleural Effusion
Pneumothorax
VTE
100

This symptom is defined as a subjective experience of breathing discomfort that must be self-reported.

What is dyspnea?

100

The first-line inhaled medication for acute severe asthma exacerbation.


  • What is a short-acting beta-agonist (SABA)?
100

The most common cause of pleural effusion in the U.S.

What is heart failure?

100

The presence of air in the pleural space is called this.

What is pneumothorax?

100

The three elements of Virchow’s Triad. 

What are blood stasis, hypercoagulability, and vessel wall injury?

200

Name two life-threatening causes of acute dyspnea that must be ruled out first.

What are pulmonary embolism and pneumothorax?

200

This ABG finding is an ominous sign in a patient with increased work of breathing.

What is a normal ABG (should shift toward respiratory alkalosis in acute asthma)?

200

This set of criteria differentiates exudative from transudative pleural effusions.

What are Light’s Criteria?

200

The most life-threatening form of pneumothorax, requiring immediate intervention.

What is tension pneumothorax?

200

The first-line imaging test for suspected DVT.

What is compression ultrasonography?

300

This validated tool is integrated into GOLD guidelines for rating dyspnea.

What is the Modified Medical Research Council Dyspnea Scale?

300

Name one absolute indication for endotracheal intubation in severe asthma.

What is cardio-respiratory arrest or apnea?

300

The classic radiographic finding of pleural effusion on chest X-ray.

What is obliteration of the costophrenic angle?

300

The gold standard imaging modality for diagnosing pneumothorax. 

What is chest CT scan?

300

The most common cause of death in severe pulmonary embolism.

What is right ventricular failure and obstructive shock?

400

The tripod position, use of accessory muscles, and supraclavicular retractions are objective findings of this severity of dyspnea.

What is acute severe or life-threatening dyspnea?

400

This ventilator strategy is used to minimize barotrauma in mechanically ventilated severe asthma patients.

What is permissive hypercapnia with low tidal volume and prolonged expiratory time?

400

The most common cause of exudative pleural effusion.

What is infection (such as bacterial pneumonia)?

400

The most common risk factor for primary spontaneous pneumothorax.

What is smoking?

400

This clinical prediction tool is used to estimate pretest probability of PE.

What is the Wells score (or Geneva score)?

500

Four most common causes of dyspnea in adults.

What are heart failure, pneumonia, obstructive lung disease (COPD/asthma), and pulmonary embolism?

500

This medication, given IV, is a second-line bronchodilator for severe asthma exacerbation.

What is magnesium sulfate?

500

This pleural fluid lab value, when less than 7.2, suggests empyema.

What is pleural fluid pH?

500

The initial management for a stable patient with a small primary spontaneous pneumothorax.

What is observation (with or without supplemental oxygen)?

500

The first-line treatment for massive PE with hemodynamic instability (no contraindications).

What is systemic thrombolysis?

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