Sensation Absentism
Alerting Trauma
Shocking
It Burns!
Trauma Tum-Tum
General Knowledge
Environmental Attack
100

What type of shock is characterized by trauma to the spinal cord, hypotension, and bradycardia?

Neurogenic Shock

100
True or False?


The death of an occupant in a vehicle collision would warrant a trauma alert and/or immediate transport to a trauma facility for other passengers in the same vehicle. 

True

100

What drug classification makes all trauma much, MUCH worse?

Blood Thinners

100

Which organ(s) are at the greatest risk of damage from a chemical exposure?

The Eyes
100

Getting hit in the abdomen with a baseball bat can do a lot of damage, however, what type of abdominal injury (Think TERD) is extremely unlikely to happen as a result of blunt trauma?

An Evisceration 

100
What lobe of the brain controls personality?

The Frontal Lobe

100

What disease requires immediate and aggressive active cooling?

Heat Stroke

200

The best way to open the airway of a patient with a suspected spine injury is what?

Jaw-thrust while holding the head. (Jaw Thrust alone works)

200

What classification of patients typically react more profoundly to fluid loss and hemorrhage due to limited fluid reserves?

Pediatrics

200

Assessment of electrical shock patients is different from other trauma patients in that a cardiac monitor is required. Why?

Heart dont like shock. (dysrhythmias)

200

What is the least likely type of burn injury to encounter in the field?

Radiological Burns

200

A decreasing pulse pressure is a sign that a patient is in what phase of shock?


Bonus: A decreasing level of consciousness is a sign that a patient is in what phase of shock? (200 points)

Compensated


Decompensated

200

DAILY DOUBLE!!

What is the formula for calculating MAP? 

Double bonus points if you write out the calculation of MAP for a blood pressure of 170/80 on the board, and then forget to erase it before tomorrow. 

(Diastolic+Diastolic+Systolic)/3


80+80+170=330

330/3=110

200

Your patient has a head injury and a core temp of 104 degrees farenheit. What treatment will provide the biggest benefit to this patient?

Cooling the patient

300

In general, which of these 2 injury types, dislocation and fracture, should the paramedic be more comfortable reducing, given that pulses distal to the injury are absent?

Fractures, especially mid-shaft long bone fractures. 

300

Soft tissue injuries that are bleeding are usually controlled with what?

Direct Pressure (Compression)

300

A fall in what vital sign generally equates to a patient moving from compensated shock to decompensated shock?

Blood Pressure

300

Patients who are exposed to super-heated gases and are exhibiting dyspnea and/or difficulty speaking require aggressive what?

Airway Management

300

A patient with an abdominal evisceration, an open femur fracture, and closed bilateral tib-fib fractures requires what type of definitive care?

Surgery

300

When assessing an unconscious trauma patient, which site should you use to assess the patients pulse?

Carotid

300

What type of dive emergency is most likely to present with joint pain as a chief complaint?

Decompression Illness/Sickness

400

What type of injury has the propensity to throw a victim a distance from the source of the event, and is quite shocking!

Lightning Strike

400

Uremia after trauma suggests which organ(s) might be damaged?

The Kidney(s). 

400

A fall in what vital sign generally signifies that a patient is moving from decompensated shock into irreversible shock?

Heart Rate

400

Based on the rule of 9's, a pediatric patient with second degree burn to their entire anterior chest, and no other burns, would be considered to have what % burns?

9%

400

Pregnant trauma patients can hide symptoms of bloodloss better than most people. Why?

Bleeding in the uterus and uterine area hides signs and symptoms of blood loss. 

400

What is 1 of the 3 sides of the pediatric assessment triangle?


Name all 3 for 400 bonus points. 


Appearance, Work of Breathing, Skin Signs

400

What nerve is contained within the sacral plexus (L4 to S3)?

The Sciatic Nerve

500

An unconscious trauma patient has started to vomit, and your EMT partner, Will Boodburn, didn't bring the suction to the patient. After directing Will to go get the suction, what should you do for the patient?

Log-roll the patient and allow the vomit to exit the patients mouth

500

A patient with a closed fracture of the largest bone in the body would be generally be expected to lose how much blood from that fracture?

1 liter

500

Why does the pulse pressure decrease (narrow) in hemorrhagic shock?

Arteriole constriction raises the diastolic blood pressure in an effort to increase blood return to the heart. 

500

What type of injury is most likely present when your burn patient has stridor?

Glottic Injury

500

One of the dangers present in closed femur fractures after the injury has reached a tamponade is what?

Compartment Syndrome

500

The most commons cause of MODS is what type of shock?

Septic Shock

500

Daily Double!!

What gas law indicates that the total pressure of a mixture of gases is equal tohe sum of the partial pressures of the individual gases?

Dalton's Law