Named for the anatomical area where fluid likely will accumulate first in the abdomen if there is an intraabdominal hemorrhage?
What is Morrison’s Pouch?
This device is use in patients with chest trauma to prevent pulmonary complications
What is incentive spirometer?
This positive finding on the FAST exam in the right upper quadrant indicates the presence of this.
What is free intraperitoneal fluid (hemoperitoneum)?
What is the management of this life-threatening condition that presents with hypotension, absent breath sounds, jugular venous distention, and tracheal deviation?
What is needle decompression for tension pneumothorax?
What is the most common cause of preventable death in trauma?
What is hemorrhage?
Named for a life-threatening condition where patient develops low BP, distended neck veins, and muffle heart sounds
It is the most common organ injured in gun-shot wounds
What is the small bowel?
This imaging modality is the gold standard for identifying solid organ injuries in stable blunt abdominal trauma patients
What is CT scan?
- Bonus $100: With contrast or non-contrast?
Patient presents with above injury, in pain with limited ROM. After complete physical exam and surveys, wound is irrigated. What is most important ED intervention for this patient?
What are antibiotics?
This device should be applied early in unstable patients with suspected pelvic fractures to reduce bleeding.
What is a pelvic binder?
Named for the classification system used for open wound fractures?
What is Gustilo Anderson Classification?
This amount of blood immediately drained from a chest tube, or this hourly rate (ml/hr) of ongoing bleeding, indicates the need for surgical thoracotomy.
What is What is >1,500 mL immediately or >200 mL/hr ongoing output?
This blunt chest injury often presents with hypoxia out of proportion to chest X-ray findings and is managed primarily with supportive care and oxygenation.
What are pulmonary contusions?
a burned patient arrived within 2 hours of suffering 30% TBSA burns. Given patient is 100kg, what is the total volume to be infused AFTER the first 8 hours of injury?
What is 6L?
This symptom is usually the last symptoms for condition that presents with pain out of proportion in an extremity trauma patient?
What is pulselessness?
- Bonus jeopardy $100: What is the next step?
Name of the distal radius fracture that usually occurs with fall to flexed outstretched hand and had radiographic volar angulation of the distal segment.
What is Smith Fracture or Reverse Colle’s Fracture?
This is the immediate prehospital and ED intervention for an open (‘sucking’) chest wound to prevent tension physiology?
What is a three-sided occlusive dressing?
This intracranial hemorrhage appears as a crescent-shaped collection on CT, is often due to tearing of bridging veins, and is more common in elderly and alcoholics.
What is a subdural hematoma?”
In severe TBI, this osmotic agent can be given to acutely lower intracranial pressure by drawing fluid out of brain tissue.”
What is mannitol (or hypertonic saline)?
The standard trauma resuscitation ratio for PRBCs, plasma, and platelets in a massive transfusion protocol is approximately this.
What is 1:1:1 ratio?
Name of the sign that describes ecchymosis around the umbilicus.
What is Cullen’s sign?
Indication for emergency laparotomy in trauma with a positive FAST exam.
What is hemodynamic instability?
This life-threatening injury is the second most common cause of sudden death after blunt trauma, and is best diagnosed with CT angiography.
What is traumatic thoracic aortic injury (dissection/rupture)?
The systolic blood pressure target for TBI to maintain cerebral perfusion pressure.
What is SBP > 100–110 mmHg?
This is the recommended agnet for Warfarin Reversal in intracranial bleeding patient?
What is prothrombin complex, 4-pccc, or Kcentra?