Anatomy
Medications
Protocols
Pediatric/Infant
Miscellaneous
100

What are 2 central pulses?

Femoral and carotid

100

Baby aspirin- indications, contraindications, dosage

I: chest pain

C: unconscious, allergic, maxed out dose

D: up to four 81 mg tablets, chewed

100

What is clinical death?

When breathing and heart action stops.

100

How do you clear an infant’s obstructed airway?

Alternate back blows, chest thrusts, and ventilation attempts

100

Describe Trendelenburg position

A patient is lying with the head slightly lower than the feet

200

Abdominal quadrant containing liver, one kidney, gall bladder, colon, pancreas

Right Upper Quadrant

200

Category/mechanism of nitro

Vasodilator

200

Define abandonment

Leaving patient before transferring to someone of equal or higher level of care

200

Infants: what is indicated by a bulging fontanelle? Sunken fontanelle?

Bulging: increased intercranial pressure (normal in crying/coughing/laughing infant, otherwise abnormal)

Sunken: dehydration

200

What does DCAPBTLS stand for?

Deformities, contusions, abrasions/avulsions perforations/punctures/penetrations, burns, tenderness, laceration, swelling

300

The anatomical description terms for: forward, back, closer, and farther

Anterior, posterior, proximal, distal

300

Category/Mechanism of albuterol

bronchodilator

300

Term that allows you to treat an unconscious patient 

Implied consent

300

Pediatric dose for epinephrine

0.15 mg

300

A patient suffers a sharp blow to the back- what organ(s) are you concerned about?

Kidneys (foremost), spine

400

Where is the spleen located (specific)?

Left Upper Quadrant

400

Nitroglycerin- indications, contraindications, dosage

I: prescription, chest pain

C: no prescription, systolic under 120, ED meds past 72 hours

D: 0.4 mg sublingual, every 5 minutes, max 3 doses INCLUDING prior to your arrival

400

What is included in mandated reporting?

Suspected abuse/neglect of an elderly, child, or disabled individual

400

Name at least 3 differences between pediatric and adult respiratory systems

Smaller nose and mouth

Tongue takes up a lot of space

Trachea is narrower

Cricoid cartilage is less rigid and less developed

Airway structures are more easily obstructed

400

When would you use a nasopharyngeal airway?

May be used when an oropharyngeal airway causes a gag reflex

500

List sections of spine and how many vertebrae are in each.

7 cervical

12 thoracic

5 lumbar

5 sacral

(+coccyx)

500

Albuterol- indications, contraindications, dosage

I: history asthma, diff breather, current prescription

C: cannot inhale properly, maxed out dose, allergic, under 6 months, cardiac disease, no diagnosis/prescription

D: 2.5-3mg in 3mL saline via nebulizer


500

What are the 5 rights?

Right:

person, dosage, route, date, medication, (documentation)

500

Normal Infant Vitals (hr, resp, systolic)

hr: 100 to 160

respiration: 25 to 50

systolic: 70 to 95


500

Arterial bleeding versus venous bleeding

artery: spurting, bright red blood

vein: oozing, darker blood