Directional Anatomy
EKG Acquisition
Legal Requirements
Pharmacology Abbreviations
Circulation
200

The opposite of deep, it means closer to the outer surface of the body

What is SUPERFICIAL

200

What is the location of the green limb lead?

What is the RIGHT LEG (clouds (white, RA) over grass)
200

Your patient turns their hand over, and extends their ring finger so you can check their blood glucose level. They are giving you?

What is IMPLIED CONSENT

200

The unit of household measurement our patient would use to take 5 mLs of cough syrup

What is a TEASPOON (3tsp=1tbsp or 15ml)

200

Veins, except the pulmonary vein, carry _____ blood back to the heart

What is DEOXYGENATED

400

Where the hand is, in relation to the elbow, on the arm

What is DISTAL (further from the trunk of the body)

400

Which lead is placed at the 5th intercostal space on the anterior axillary line?

What is V5 (precordial/chest (orange) lead)

400

A document that expresses your patient's wishes that they are not given CPR in the event of cardiac arrest

What is DO NOT RECUSISITATE (DNR)

400

The abbreviation on a prescription that means that our patient should take the medication each night, at bedtime

What is QHS (every hour of sleep)

400

The largest blood vessel in the body, it is responsible for pumping blood from the heart back into the body to deliver oxygen and nutrients to all of the organs and systems

What is the AORTA

600

The first word in the anatomical location of EKG lead wire V5 which tells us that lead is closer to the front of the body than its neighbor V6 which is placed further in the axilla.

What is ANTERIOR (towards the front)

600

The meaning of the A in the leads AvR, AvL & AvF?

What is AUGMENTED (the leads augment (amplify) each other's signals)

600

The AA in the acronym HIPAA

What is ACCOUNTABILITY ACT (health insurance portability and accountability act)

600

We aren't telling our patients to go to the post office, but to take their medication by mouth or orally

What is PO (per os, using the oral route)

600

Pulmonary circulation refers to the flow of deoxygenated blood from the heart to the lungs and back into the heart, while _____ ______ refers to the flow of oxygenated blood through the rest of the body and back to the heart

What is SYSTEMIC CIRCULATION

800

The opposite of lateral, it's used to describe when something is closer to the (vertical ↕) midpoint of the body.

What is MEDIAL (towards the midline)

800

The number of large boxes we use to mark a 6 second strip of the EKG tracing when measuring an irregular heart rate.

What is 30 (each large box is 5 small boxes wide by 5 small boxes tall).

800

If you failed to properly cleanse the skin before a blood draw and your patient developed an infection, you would be guilty of?

What is NEGLIGENCE (performing a duty below the standard of care)

800

When it's in capital letters, we understand it to mean we draw a glucose tolerance blood test. When it's on a prescription, we tell the patient to apply it how?

What is in DROPS (gtt/gtts)

800

Hemoglobin carries oxygen from the lungs throughout the body and carries _____ ______ from the body back to the lungs to be expelled during exhalation

What is CARBON DIOXIDE (CO2)

1000

How would we describe the location of the chest in relation to the abdomen? ie: the chest is _____ to the abdomen.

What is SUPERIOR (towards the head, or above)

1000

The speed of the EKG machine is measured horizontally (↔) on an EKG in which unit of measurement, per second?

What is MILLIMETERS per second

1000

A patient visiting our community from another state, walks into the emergency department in active labor. She receives the necessary care to either safely stop her early labor, or safely deliver her baby, regardless of her insurance plan. Because?

What is EMTALA (Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act)

1000

We use the personal computer at work to document the patient education we provide. How would you tell your patient to test their blood sugar level 2 hours after each meal?

What is 2 hours PC (after meals, post cibum) (as opposed to AC or ante cibum which means BEFORE meals)

1000

The body's smallest blood vessels, they facilitate the exchange of H2O, O2, CO2, nutrients and waste products between the veins and arteries

What are CAPILLARIES