The Pressor is On
Blood, Sweat & Tears
Heart-Breaker
Burns and Poisons
Mystery Flavor
100

These are the main adrenergic receptors for vasopressor activity

alpha-1, beta-1, and beta-2, dopamine

100

Your patient in septic shock requires intubation, and this RSI med should be avoided

Etomidate (adrenocortical supression)

100

A patient with a critical coarct experiences this type of shock

Obstructive

100

These are the three stages of shock

Compensated, hypotensive, irreversible

100

Which of the following patients is not considered hypotensive?

a. 8 year old with SBP 85

b. 12 month old with SBP 75

c. 22 day old with SBP 50

d. 3 month old with SBP 60


b.

- 0 to 28 days: <60 mmHg

- 1 month to 12 months: <70 mmHg

- 1 to 10 years old: <(70 mmHg + [2 x age in years])

- ≥10 years old: <90 mmHg

200

This pressor can increased blood flow to the kidneys

Dopamine

200

Neurogenic shock can occur with injuries above this spinal level

T6

200

This is the box warning side effect associated with the drug used to treat critical coarct

Apnea
200
This is the amount of fluid required for a 10 kg pediatric patient with 25% BSA partial thickness burns

4 x 25x 10 = 1000 mL over 24 hours + maintenance

200

The term used to describe decreased responsiveness to successive doses of a drug

Tachyphylaxis

300

This is the class of drugs that milrinone belongs to

PDE inhibitors

300

Your patient has a tension pneumothorax.  These are the two anatomical needle thoracostomy locations

fifth ICS in the midaxillary line (ATLS), or second ICS in the midclavicular line

300

These are the three anatomical approaches to an emergency pericardiocentesis

Subxiphoid (subcostal), parasternal, apical

300

In burn patients, fluid resuscitation is maintained to target this rate of urine output in children

1.0 mL/kg/h

300
These are the three types of shock that can cause a widened pulse pressure

Septic, anaphylactic, neurogenic

400

This is the difference between effects of low dose and high dose epinephrine infusions

CO ↑↑, SVR ↓ (low dose) SVR/↑ (higher dose)

400

Which of the following is not a symptom of spinal shock?

a. bladder incontinence

b. areflexia

c. cool hands and feet

d. priapism

c. cool hands and feet

Usually cool below the level, flushed above the level (autonomic dysreflexia)

400

While doing a pericardiocentesis in an adolescent, removal of 5-10 mL of fluid can increase the stroke volume by up to this %

25-50%

400

A toddler presents with hypotension and bradycardia after ingesting grandma's pills. This is the likely drug ingested

CCB and BB's

400

This is the leading cause of pediatric shock worldwide

Hypovolemia from gastroenteritis

500

Name two known complications of vasopressors

Extravasation, hypoperfusion, dysrhythmia, MI, hypoglycemia

500

This is the percentage of blood loss associated with changes in mental status and urine output

Class 3 hemorrhagic shock - 30-40% blood loss

500

During your trauma rotation, a patient is in shock from massive blood loss.  Name 3 contraindications for performing and ED thoracotomy

- Patient has no pulse or blood pressure in the field

- Asystole is the presenting rhythm and there is no pericardial tamponade

- Prolonged pulselessness (over 15 minutes) during resuscitation

- Massive, nonsurvivable injuries have occurred

- No thoracic or trauma surgeon is available within approximately 45 minutes

500

A toddler was found with shallow breathing, bradycardia and hypotension after clonidine ingestion. You try giving this medication, which has been used with inconsistent results

Naloxone

500

12yF with chronic steroid use presents with altered mental status, fever and hypotension.  In addition to fluids and antibiotics, this is the other medication AND dose you would give

100 mg (age based) or 1 to 2 mg/kg (weight based) IV hydrocortisone 

- BSA-based hydrocortisone dose:

Initial IV dose 50 to 100 mg/m2 (preferred if the BSA can be promptly calculated)

- Weight-based hydrocortisone dose: Initial IV dose 1 to 2 mg/kg (maximum single dose 100 mg)


- Age-based hydrocortisone dose:

• <3 years old: Initial IV dose 25 mg

• 3 to 12 years old: Initial IV dose 50 mg

• 12 years and older: Initial IV dose 100 mg