Medical/Anatomy
Trauma
Medications
Skills
Random
100

Shock caused by an allergic reaction.


What is anaphylactic shock?

100

The last vital sign to change in response to shock.

What is the blood pressure?

100

The patient medication that will assist with breathing during anaphylactic shock.

What is epinephrine?

100

You would use an occlusive bandage and you would tape 3 sides.

What is a sucking chest wound?

100

Definitive care within 1 hour of the injury.

What is the golden hour?

200

Another name for grand mal seizure.

What is Tonic-Clonic seizure?

200

Do not replace organ(s), apply an occlusive dressing and bulky trauma dressings.

What is an evisceration?

200

A hormone that stimulates cells in the liver to break down stores of glycogen into glucose.

What is Glucagon?

200

Alternate back blows, chest thrusts, and ventilation attempts.

How do you clear an infant’s obstructed airway?

200

The acronym used to find contusions, punctures, lacerations, etc.

What is DCAPBTLS?

300

List the organs in the upper left quadrant

What is liver, spleen, pancreas, stomach, left kidney, and colon.

300

You feel a "popping" as if there were crisped rice cereal trapped beneath the skin.

What is subcutaneous emphysema?

300

MDI is abbreviated for. 

What is Metered Dose Inhaler?

300

Should be treated by repositioning the airway and reducing the size of ventilations.

What is stomach (gastric) distention?

300

This respiratory disease is caused by the breakdown of the alveolar wall surface and the lungs loose their elasticity and excessive mucus is secreted in both the alveoli and bronchioles.

What is Emphysema?

400

The dominant pacemaker of the heart.

What is the SA node?

400

The organ that can be injured from a sharp blow to the back.

What is the Kidney?

400

Proventil is the trade name for what drug.

What is Albuterol?

400

The proper head position when using an oropharyngeal airway.

What is hyperextended?

400

This is a condition that result from the buildup of fatty deposits on the inner walls of blood vessels.

What is Arteriosclerosis?

500

Name two central pulses.

What is the carotid and femoral pulses?
500

Irregular, decreased respirations (caused by impaired brainstem function)

Bradycardia.

Systolic hypertension (widening pulse pressure)

What is Cushing's Triad? 

500
the medication given to help croup. 

what is racemic epinephrine?

500

Pain and/or "pulling" felt when the patient's knees are elevated and the head is flexed (chin to chest).

What is Burdzinski's Sign?

500

This is the time frame in which Thrombolytic therapy must be initiated from the onset of a Cerebral Vascular Accident.

What is 3 hours?