Airway & Breathing – “Heroes or Zeroes?”
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Fireground Medicine
Name That Rhythm!
100

This position opens the airway best in an unconscious patient with no trauma.

head-tilt chin-lift

100

This type of bleeding control device should be applied high and tight.

Tourniquet

100

A patient presents with hives, wheezing, and low blood pressure.

Anaphylaxis

100

This is the first dose of Epi in adult cardiac arrest.

1 mg 1:10,000 IV/IO every 3–5 minutes

100

A firefighter removed from overhaul with headache and nausea may have this condition.

CO poisoning

100

Regular, narrow-complex rhythm over 150+.

SVT

200

This capnography waveform shape is classic for bronchospasm.

Shark-fin waveform

200

This medication is used to reduce mortality when given early in hemorrhagic shock (within 3 hours).

TXA


200

I strike without warning, abrupt and unfair,
Sudden sharp chest pain and shortness of air.
Maybe a long car ride, surgery, or clot in the leg,
Now racing heart, low sats, and they’re losing their edge.

Pulmonary embolism (PE)

200

This is the first-line pain medication for severe traumatic pain.

Fentanyl

200

This condition occurs when muscle cells break down and release myoglobin after extreme heat stress.

Rhabdomyolysis

200

Irregularly irregular with no P waves.

Atrial fibrillation

300

The first-line treatment for anaphylaxis respiratory compromise.

IM epinephrine

300

The three types of bleeding are arterial, venous, and ______.

Capillary

300

Severe RUQ pain after a fatty meal radiating to the right shoulder blade.

Cholecystitis

300

Pediatric fluid bolus is this many mL/kg

20 mL/kg

300

The antidote for cyanide poisoning found in fire victims.

Hydroxocobalamin

300

Wide, regular tachycardia with no P waves.

Ventricular tachycardia

400

This airway device is inserted blindly and comes in sizes based on patient weight.

i-Gel

400

The correct first treatment for an abdominal evisceration.

Moist, sterile dressing + occlusive dressing

400

Altered mental status, puffy hands, and a BP of 190/112 in a 32-week pregnant patient.

Pre-eclampsia

400

This is the correct adult dose of aspirin in suspected ACS.

324 mg chewable

400

A PASS alarm signifies this type of emergency.

A down/injured/lost firefighter

400

Peaked T waves, prolonged PR, wide QRS is caused by _________.

Hyperkalemia


500

This is the most reliable indicator of adequate ventilation during resuscitation.

ETCO₂

500

This type of shock presents with warm skin initially and low SVR after spinal trauma.

Neurogenic shock

500

Hot, red, swollen skin with streaking and fever, often after a small cut.

Cellulitis

500

Obstetric emergency involving seizures.

Eclampsia

500

Severe heatstroke’s hallmark temperature threshold.

Often ≥104°F (40°C)

500

Tombstone ST elevations in contiguous leads with reciprocal changes

STEMI

600

Stridor on inspiration most commonly indicates swelling in this region.

Upper airway / larynx

600

This injury type is identified by paradoxical chest wall movement.

Flail chest

600

Confusion, hot dry skin, and altered mentation after exertion in heat.

Heatstroke

600

The correct medication to be given when encountering a hypoglycemic patient with a gag reflex and ability to swallow.

Oral glucose

600

Repeated exposure to high-stress calls increases cortisol, which increases long-term risk for this cardiovascular condition.

Hypertension (or accelerated cardiovascular disease)

600

A sawtooth baseline with a fixed conduction ratio suggests this rhythm.

Atrial flutter


700

This breathing pattern has a crescendo–decrescendo rhythm and is seen in strokes or brain injuries.

Cheyne–Stokes respirations

700

A “raccoon eyes” and “Battle sign” indicate this kind of fracture.

Basilar skull fracture

700

Pinpoint pupils, bradypnea, and reduced consciousness.

Opioid overdose

700

Pediatric bradycardia with poor perfusion requires THIS medication if oxygen and ventilation don't correct it.

Epinephrine

700

A patient pulled from a house fire is coughing soot and has singed nasal hairs. What life-threatening condition must you suspect first?

Airway burns / inhalation injury

700

Chaotic baseline, no P waves, no organized QRS complexes.

Ventricular fibrillation

800

In asthma, this medication is the FIRST nebulized treatment you should give.

Albuterol

800

This type of shock presents with cold, clammy skin and narrow pulse pressure.

Hypovolemic shock

800

A fruity breath smell, Kussmaul respirations, and high blood glucose.

DKA (Diabetic Ketoacidosis)

800

This is the most common cause of cardiac arrest in pediatric patients.

Respiratory failure / hypoxia

800

A patient with facial burns is speaking normally at first, but 10 minutes later begins to develop hoarseness and stridor. What EMS action becomes urgent?

Prepare for early airway management. RSI

800

Regular rhythm with prolonged PR interval consistently before each QRS.

First-degree AV block

900

This oxygen delivery device can provide up to ~95% oxygen when used correctly.

Nonrebreather mask

900

For an amputated limb, you should wrap it, place it in a bag, and then do THIS.

Place the bag on ice (NOT directly touching ice)

900

A stiff neck, fever, and photophobia, especially in children or teens.

Meningitis

900

A child with inspiratory stridor, barking cough, and recent cold symptoms most likely has this condition.

Croup

900

A 32-year-old male is pulled from a fire with burns to the entire right arm, anterior chest, anterior right leg.
Using the Rule of 9s for adults, what is the total burn surface area (TBSA%)?

9%+9%+9%=27%

900

Wide QRS complex with slurred upstroke ("delta wave") indicates this condition.

WPW (Wolff-Parkinson-White)

1000

A sudden drop of ETCO₂ to near-zero during intubation suggests this critical event.

Tube dislodgement (or cardiac arrest progression)

1000

This is the safest technique to stabilize a suspected spinal injury during airway assessment and management.

Manual in-line stabilization

1000

A sudden “worst headache of my life” may indicate this emergency.

Subarachnoid hemorrhage

1000

"The "E" in the DOPE mnemonic.

Equipment Failure

1000

A firefighter experiences chest tightness, shortness of breath, and anxiety immediately after a violent call. Name the condition that mimics ACS but is stress-induced.

Stress cardiomyopathy (Takotsubo syndrome)

1000

A rhythm that alternates between fast and slow heart rates is often called this.

Sick sinus syndrome

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