All Bleeding Stops Eventually
Rub Some Dirt on It
Bruised, Maybe Broken
Shock-Ing
DC 2 JC
100

A femur fracture can cause this much internal blood loss: 

What is up to one liter?

100

Name the size in millemeters of most normal pupils: 

What is 3mm?

100

A wound over a fractured bone is considered this: 

What is an open fracture? 

100

Name the word: Circulation of blood within an organ in adequate amounts to meet the body's metabolic needs.

What is perfusion? 

100

Define hypovolemic shock.

What is a lack of blood volume causing hypoperfusion? 

200

At what blood volume loss does a person's BP usually begin to drop significantly? 

What is 30-40% or 1.5-2L?

200

Define flail chest.

What is 2+ ribs broken in 2+ places causing paradoxical chest wall movement? 

200

Score the GCS of this patient: opens eyes to verbal cues, oriented to self and place only, follows directions to move limbs:

What is 13?  GCS= E3+V4+M6

200

Score the GCS of the following patient: opens eyes to painful stimuli, makes moaning noises, pulls hand away when you pinch the nail bed: 

What is the GCS of 9? E:2 V:2 M:5 =9  

200

An open neck injury has high mortality risks associated with what three things:

What are Bleeding, Tracheal injury, and air embolism?

300
Describe the reasoning behind splinting fractured long bones.

What are: to minimize soft tissue damage from the broken ends, minimize pain, decrease blood loss, prevent nerve and vessel injury? 

300

Differentiate between a pneumothorax and a tension pneumothorax

What is a pneumothorax is some air in the chest cavity, whereas a tension pneumo will cause midline shift of the heart and lungs? 

300

Name the two bones that compose the lower leg

What are the tibia and fibula? 

300

Red flags for an airway burn include the following 3 signs:

What are: 

1. singed nose hairs/facial hair 

2. soot around mouth/nares 

3. hoarse voice

300

Name the type of head bleed is associated with highest mortality rate: 

What is Intracerebral or Intraparenchymal? 

400

What two preventable events during patient care have a 40% increase in mortality in trauma patients:

What are hypoxia and hypovolemia?

400

Name the two solid organs in the abdomen that are most likely to result in exsanguination when severely damaged.

What are the live and spleen? 
400

A patient who displays deceberate posturing is described as: 

What is abnormal extension posturing?

400

Define evisceration and how to bandage it

What are intestines poking out from wound; clean, moist dressing covered with an occlusive dressing?

400

Define the trauma triad of death.

What is metabolic acidosis, hypothermia and coagulopathy? 

500

Define MAP, how it is calculated, and at what number should we aim to maintain in all patients:

 What is: Mean Arterial Pressure, MAP=DBP + (SBP-DBP)/3, above 65?

500

The phrenic nerve innervates the diaphragm, at what cervical vertebrae does it exit from the spinal column? 

What is C3-C4-C5? (3-4-5 keep you alive)

500

Body Surface Area percentages of burns are measured only from these two types of burns: 

What are partial thickness (2nd degree) and full-thickness (3rd degree) burns? 

500

Describe the following wounds: 1: laceration 2: avulsion 3: puncture 4: abrasion 5: incision

What are: 1: jagged cut 2: flap 3: small hole 4: rough superficial wound 5: clean edged cut

500

Name 5 sign/s symptoms of a serious head injury:

What are: CSF and blood from nares or ears, LOC-conscious-LOC pattern, decorticate or deceberate posturing, widening pulse pressure,  increasing bradycardia, abnormal breathing pattern

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