Class of drugs for diazepam.
What is benzodiazepines.
Sodasorb.
What is removes carbon dioxide from exhaled air.
How a horse is intubated.
What is blind intubation.
Name 2 ways to confirm proper placement of an ET tube in a dog.
What is visualization, palpation, movement of flutter valves, fogging of tube, movement of reservoir bag, connecting a capnograph.
Collapse of the alveoli.
What is atelectasis.
Example of a phenothiazine.
What is acepromazine.
Flowmeter.
What is controls the flow of oxygen.
What phase of anesthesia is the most challenging part of equine anesthesia.
Name 3 signs your patient may be ready for intubation.
What is diminished or absent palpebral reflex, lack of withdrawal with a toe pinch, lack of jaw tone, eyes rotated ventromedially, unable to keep head up.
Enterotomy.
What is incision into the intestines.
What is the most adverse side effect when propofol is given too quickly?
What is apnea.
Activated charcoal canister.
What is F/Air canister. Removes waste anesthetic gases.
Hard, swollen muscles, stiff & painful gait.
What is myopathy.
Name 2 reasons to avoid chamber inductions.
What is difficult to monitor, inability to assess patient, exposure to waste anesthetic gas, flailing/thrashing.
A PaCO2 greater than 55 mmHg indicates that is patient is ___________.
What is hypoventilating.
Telazol.
What is tiletamine & zolazepam.
Pressure manometer.
What is measures the pressure in the patient circuit. Reflection of the pressure in the patients lungs.
Triple drip.
What is guaifenesin, ketamine & xylazine.
Inhalant that is the least irritating to mucous membranes.
What is sevoflurane.
Your patient has stopped breathing & it looks like cardiac arrest is next. What is the first thing you should do?
What is turn off the vaporizer.
Apneustic respirations.
What is ketamine.
Allows patient to breath room air if oxygen becomes unavailable.
What is the negative pressure relief valve.
Two common complications seen in horses anesthetized with inhalant agents.
What are hypotension, hypoventilation, hypoxemia.
Name 3 pain related physiologic changes.
What are hypertension, tachycardia, tachypnea, peripheral vasoconstriction (pale MM), tachyarrhythmia, hypertension.
When performing CPR, an end-tidal CO2 level greater than _____ mmHg during the exhalation phase of manual ventilation is considered to indicate adequate forward movement of blood.
What is 15.