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50 Cards in this Set

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A 34 year old man is injured in a motor vehicle collision. Physical examination is normal except for diffuse abdominal tenderness. He is conscious and vital signs obtained enroute to the hospital are respirations 20 per ,minute, pulse rate is 120 per minute blood pressure 100/60; How should this patient be managed in the field?

A. Intravenous fluid at a "keep open" rate
B. Intravenous fluid at 20 ml/kg bolus
C. Fentanyl 100 mcg intravenous
D. Insert an oropharyngeal airway and assist
ventilations
A. Intravenous fluid at a "keep open" rate
What is Sellick's maneuver?

A. A method allowing the rescuer to hold a mask on
the face with both hands
B. A system used to calculate minute volume
C. Another name for Mallampati
D. Posteriorly directed pressure applied to the
cricoid cartilage
D. Posteriorly directed pressure applied to the
cricoid cartilage
For which one of the following viruses is there currently an effective vaccine?

A. Delta hepatitis
B. Hepatitis B
C. Hepatitis C
D. Human immunodeficiency virus
B. Hepatitis B
A 16 year old girl is rescued from a burning house. She has 25% partial thickness burns, and the burned areas are hot to the touch. What is the appropriate treatment?

A. Apply ice to burned areas until cool to touch
B. Apply clean water to burned areas for up to 1-2
minutes
C. Apply iced water to burned areas until cool to
touch
D. Do not apply anything to burned areas other
than clean sheets
B. Apply clean water to burned areas for up to 1-2
minutes
Proper immobilization of a forearm (radius and ulna) fracture involves splinting which of the following?

A. Elbow and fracture site
B. Fracture site only
C. Wrist and fracture site
D. Wrist, elbow, and fracture site
D. Wrist, elbow, and fracture site
What treatment is NOT indicated in the routine management of the patient with a head injury?

A. Administration of 100% oxygen
B. Fluid resuscitation to a BP of 110-120 systolic if
the patient is hypotensive
C. Hyperventilating to obtain an EtCO2 of less than
30
D. Stabilization of the cervical spine
C. Hyperventilating to obtain an EtCO2 of less than
30
Which of the following sets of vital signs is most compatible with a diagnosis of isolated head injury with increasing intracranial pressure?

A. BP 170/100, pulse 50/min
B. BP 80/60, pulse 130/min
C. BP 80/60, pulse 50/min
D. BP 170/100, pulse 130/min
A. BP 170/100, pulse 50/min
Which of the following trauma situations would be considered "load and go"?

A. Awake and alert patient who has blood coming
out of one ear
B. Patient who had brief loss of consciousness but is
now awake
C. Patient with abdominal tenderness, clammy skin,
blood pressure 100/70, and pulse 130/min
D. Patient with tender, deformed lower leg
C. Patient with abdominal tenderness, clammy skin,
blood pressure 100/70, and pulse 130/min
Which one of the following should be performed, at the scene of a "load and go", prior to moving the trauma patient to the ambulance?

A. Apply traction splint for femur fracture
B. Decompress tension pneumothorax
C. Initiate intravenous line
D. Obtain vital signs
B. Decompress tension pneumothorax
Which one of the following is a reason to interrupt the initial assessment?

A. Cardiac arrest
B. Multiple open (compound) fractures
C. Severe head injury with brain tissue visible
D. Severe shock
A. Cardiac arrest
A 24 year old woman is found lying on the sidewalk after jumping from a fourth story window. She is hypotensive, diaphoretic, tachycardic, and unconscious. Injuries include open skull fracture, pelvis fractures, and flail chest. What should be your goal for your time?

A. 5 minutes or less
B. 5 to 10 minutes
C. 10 to 15 minutes
D. As long as necessary to assess and stabilize the
patient
A. 5 minutes or less
Which of the following injuries would change an otherwise stable trauma patient's category from "stable" to "load and go"?

A. Bilateral clavicle fractures
B. Bilateral femur fractures
C. Bilateral humerus fractures
D. Bilateral tibia fractures
B. Bilateral femur fractures
What is most commonly injured, during a fall from a height, of an infant?

A. Head
B. Chest
C. Abdomen
D. Extremities
A. Head
What site is the first choice for intraosseous infusion?

A. Proximal tibia
B. Distal humerus
C. Proximal femur
D. Distal fibula
A. Proximal tibia
Which of the following will generally suffer the LEAST structural damage from a gunshot wound from a rifle?

A. Spleen
B. Kidney
C. Liver
D. Lung
D. Lung
-Generally damage done is proportional to tissue density. Highly dense organs such as bone, muscle, and the liver sustain more damage than less dense organs such as the lungs.
A 34 year old man has a gunshot wound to the right groin area. Arterial bleeding, which cannot be controlled with direct pressure, is coming from the wound. The patient appears confused, diaphoretic, and has weak peripheral pulses. What is the appropriate fluid resuscitation for this patient?

A. Intravenous fluid at a "keep open" rate
B. Apply a hemostatic agent and gain intravenous
access given enough fluid to maintain
peripheral pulses
C. Intravenous fluid at a wide open rate; give at least
two liters, then reassess patient
D. No intravenous access should be established in
this situation
B. Apply a hemostatic agent and gain intravenous
access given enough fluid to maintain
peripheral pulses
Which one of the following is typically associated with, post-traumatic hemorrhage, EARLY shock?

A. Ventricular dysrhythmias
B. Hypotension
C. Loss of 30% to 45% of blood volume
D. Narrowed pulse pressure
D. Narrowed pulse pressure
-There will almost always be an initial narrowing of the pulse pressure because vasoconstriction raises the Diastolic Pressure more than the Systolic. The shunting of blood from the skin and the loss of circulating RBC's cause the pallor of shock
Among the following, what is the most common cause of preventable trauma death in the injured adult patient?

A. Airway obstruction
B. Cardiac tamponade
C. Hemorrhagic shock
D. Spinal injury
C. Hemorrhagic shock
In which of the following situations should an emergency rescue be used?

A. Leaking antifreeze from radiator
B. Paralyzed patient
C. Presence of toxic fumes
D. Pregnant patient
C. Presence of toxic fumes
Which of the following is most typical of early, neurogenic shock?

A. Increased pulse, clammy skin
B. Increased pulse, warm and dry skin
C. Decreased pulse, clammy skin
D. Decreased pulse, warm and dry skin
D. Decreased pulse, warm and dry skin
A 23 year old man is injured in a motorcycle collision. The patient appears disoriented and grossly intoxicated. There is a large laceration on his scalp, which is actively bleeding. The patient refuses treatment and threatens to call his lawyer if anyone touches him. What should you do?

A. Allow the patient to phone his lawyer
B. Have the patient sign a release form, then let him
go
C. Have the patient placed under protective custody
then treat and transport the patient using
restraints if necessary
D. Wait until the patient passes out from his head
injury or bleeding then transport
C. Have the patient placed under protective custody
then treat and transport the patient using
restraints if necessary
Which of the following is an acceptable location to insert a needle when decompressing a tension pneumothorax?

A. Directly under the bottom of the second rib,
midclavicular line
B. Directly under the bottom of the third rib,
midclavicular line
C. Directly over the top of the fourth rib, midaxillary
line
D. Directly over the top of the third rib, midclavicular
line
D. Directly over the top of the third rib, midclavicular
line
A 54 year old man is involved in a motor vehicle collision. The steering wheel is bent. During your initial assessment you note his skin is pale and his radial pulses are present. Breath sounds are clear, heart tones are not muffled. Which one of the following is most consistent with these findings?

A. Cardiac contusion
B. Traumatic aortic rupture
C. Flail chest
D. Tension pneumothorax
A. Cardiac contusion
What is the most common cause of cardiopulmonary arrest in the trauma patient?

A. Brain injury
B. Hypoxemia
C. Myocardial contusion
D. Ventricular arrhythmia
B. Hypoxemia
-Acute Airway Obstruction or ineffective breathing will be clinically manifested as Hypoxemia.
A 49 year old man is involved in a motor vehicle collision. First responders are doing CPR. Findings include a distended abdomen and obviously deformed pelvis and a quick look at the monitor shows asystole. Which of the following is the most appropriate act?


A. Establish intravenous access and administer a
20mL/kg bolus
B. Establish intravenous access and administer a 1
liter bolus
C. Establish intravenous access and administer a 2-4
liter bolus
D. Resuscitative efforts should not be started and
the patient pronounced dead
D. Resuscitative efforts should not be started and
the patient pronounced dead
Which of the following statements concerning treatment of shock in the pregnant, burn patient is TRUE?


A. Oxygen should be used sparingly so as to avoid
oxygen toxicity to the fetus
B. Pressor agents such as dopamine should be used
to improve circulation to the fetus
C. Volume replacement should be given earlier and
in larger amounts to the pregnant, burn patient
D. Volume replacement should be given more slowly
so as to avoid fluid overloading the fetus
C. Volume replacement should be given earlier and
in larger amounts to the pregnant, burn patient
-Fetal Mortality increases when the maternal surface burn exceeds 20%.
Which area of the spine is most susceptible to injury in a rear-impact motor vehicle crash?

A. Cervical
B. Thoracic
C. Lumbar
D. Sacral-coccygeal
A. Cervical
An unrestrained 18 year old male on the way to a post-graduation party leaves the road, bounces through a ditch and hits a tree. You find him behind the bent steering wheel, unconscious, cool, pale and clammy, blue around the lips with labored respirations of 30 and shallow, thready radial pulses of about 120, distended neck veins, tracheal deviation to the right, an asymmetrical chest with absent breath sounds on the left. You assume he has a

A. Cardiac tamponade
B. Tension pneumothorax
C. Massive hemothorax
D. Simple pneumothorax
B. Tension pneumothorax
Which one of the following may predict which patients might have difficult laryngoscopy and intubation?

A. Patients with dentures
B. Patients with history of asthma
C. Patients with an overbite
D. Patients with beards
C. Patients with an overbite
An unrestrained 18 year old male on the way to a post-graduation party leaves the road, bounces through a ditch and hits a tree. You find him behind the bent steering wheel, unconscious, cool, pale and clammy, with labored respirations of 30 and shallow, thready radial pulses of about 120, flat neck veins, trachea midline, an asymmetrical chest with absent breath sounds on the left. You assume he has a

A. Cardiac tamponade
B. Tension pneumothorax
C. Massive hemothorax
D. Simple pneumothorax
C. Massive hemothorax
A 23 year old female has won the “Let’s-see-who-can-lean-the-farthest-backward-over- the-second-story-balcony-railing” contest. You arrive to find her boyfriend standing over her, holding two beers, as she lies on the grass under the balcony. She opens her eyes to voice, her skin is normal in color, respirations about 16 and unlabored, pulse 54 and a little weak at the wrist, with no external bleeding. She has flat neck veins, a normal chest and abdomen and a stable pelvis. First responders who arrived just before you tell you that her pulse ox reading is 94 and her BP is 74/30. If this is true,

A. Hypovolemic shock
B. Relative hypovolemic (high-space) shock
C. Mechanical (obstructive) shock
D. Cardiogenic shock
B. Relative hypovolemic (high-space) shock

dont understand this one
A 23 year old female has won the “Let’s-see-who-can-lean-the-farthest-backward-over- the-second-story-balcony-railing contest. You arrive to find her boyfriend standing over her, holding two beers, as she lies on the grass under the balcony. She opens her eyes to voice, her skin is cool, clammy and ashen, respirations are rapid and shallow, radial pulses are too rapid to count and thready. There is no external bleeding. She has flat neck veins, a normal chest and abdomen and pelvis. Her boyfriend tells you that she has some kind of heart problem but he doesn’t know what. Placed on the monitor, she shows a wide-complex tachycardia of about 280. What kind of shock is she suffering?

A. Hypovolemic shock
B. Relative hypovolemic (high-space) shock
C. Mechanical (obstructive) shock
D. Cardiogenic shock
D. Cardiogenic shock
Which of the following would be the most compelling reason to intubate a patient immediately?

A. Snoring respirations
B. Gurgling respirations
C. Inability to ventilate (achieve chest rise)
D. Traumatic arrest
C. Inability to ventilate (achieve chest rise)
Which of the following may affect the reliability of a pulse oxymetry reading?

A. Cyanide poisoning
B. High ambient light
C. Carbon monoxide poisoning
D. All of the above
D. All of the above
During the Primary Survey you recognize your patient is in need of immediate ventilator support, you delegate this intervention to a team member and you continue the Primary Survey. This delegation of interventions is called:

A. the “Just Do It” process
B. the “Treat It as You Find It” process
C. the “Get It Done” process
D. the “Fix It” process
D. the “Fix It” process
Which of the following conditions is your FIRST priority in management of a trauma patient?

A. Open the airway and assess for breathing
B. Provide ventilator support for your patient
C. Control major external bleeding
D. Begin chest compressions if pulses are absent
C. Control major external bleeding
In the absence of herniation syndrome, adult head injured patients should be:

A. ventilated at a rate of 8-10 per minute
B. ventilated at a rate of 12-14 per minute
C. ventilated at a rate of 16-18 per minute
D. ventilated at a rate of 20 per minute
A. ventilated at a rate of 8-10 per minute
Supine hypotension syndrome in the pregnant patient is caused by::

A. uterine obstruction of venous blood flow
B. atelectasis (collapse of small airways) of the lungs C. uterine pressure on the vagal nerve
D. gastric reflux
A. uterine obstruction of venous blood flow
Which of the following has a greater chance of surviving traumatic cardiopulmonary arrest?

A. Patients who suffer blunt force trauma to the
torso
B. Patients with non-dilated pupils
C. Patients with dilated unresponsive pupils
D. Patients with penetrating chest trauma who are
hypothermic
D. Patients with penetrating chest trauma who are
hypothermic
-Special consideration should be given to victims of near drowning, lightning strike, and hypothermia.
Tourniquet application should be limited to less than:

A. 1 hour
B. 2 hours
C. 3 hours
D. 4 hours
B. 2 hours
Hemostatic agents applied directly to the source of bleeding must be used in conjunction with:

A. direct pressure to the wound
B. tourniquets proximal to the wound
C. pressure points to arteries proximal to the wound D. elevation of the wound above the level of the
heart
A. direct pressure to the wound
Which assessment tool(s) may assist in predicting patient deterioration for someone who otherwise appears stable?

A. Serum lactate levels
B. Blood sugar levels
C. Abdominal ultrasound
D. A & C
D. A & C
Which of the following concerning blast injury is TRUE?

A. Primary injury is cased by heat
B. Secondary injury is caused by materials propelled
C. Tertiary injury is caused by toxic fumes
D. Quaternary injury is caused by the displacement
of the body
B. Secondary injury is caused by materials propelled
What are the most important factors in determining injuries sustained in a fall?

A. Distance, impact area on the body, surface struck B. Distance, clothing worn, surface struck
C. Distance, movement during the fall, underlying
medical conditions
D. Distance, underlying medical conditions, surface
struck
D. Distance, underlying medical conditions, surface
struck
You have a patient with an isolated stab wound to the lateral chest. According to recent studies, which of the following procedures should be avoided?

A. Assisting ventilations
B. Supplemental oxygen
C. Occlusive dressing
D. Spinal motion restriction
D. Spinal motion restriction
-A recent study found that patients with penetrating trauma to the trunk were twice as likely to die if they were spinal packaged in the field. When you have a patient with a gunshot or sttab wound of the trunk that is not in proximity to the spine and no symptoms of spinal injury, you should carefully, but not quickly load the patient on the stretcher and transport immediately.
-Similarly, isolated gunshot wounds to the head may not require SMR.
The “Golden Period” begins:

A. at the time of injury
B. at the time your unit is dispatched
C. when your unit arrives on scene
D. when your unit lease the scene for the hospital
A. at the time of injury
Pulsus paradoxus is best described by which of the following?

A. The radial pulse disappears upon inspiration
B. The radial pulse is absent
C. The radial pulse is stronger than the carotid pulse D. There are unequal radial pulses
A. The radial pulse disappears upon inspiration
Which of the following is the correct orientation for inserting an intraosseous needle to the proximal tibia?

A. Medial to the midline, avoiding the growth plate B. Medial to the midline, pointing towards the
growth plate
C. Lateral to the midline, avoiding the growth plate D. Lateral to the midline, pointing towards the
growth plate
A. Medial to the midline, avoiding the growth plate
A 35-year-old male is found at the scene of a motor vehicle collision. He is alert and oriented and complaining of knee pain. Your assessment reveals a respiratory rate of 16 per minute non-labored, pulse rate of 88 per minute strong, blood pressure 124/64, unequal pupils and swelling to the isolated knee injury. What is the most likely cause of the unequal pupils?

A. Pre-existing condition (anisocoria)
B. Increased intracranial pressure
C. Alcohol intoxication
D. Hypotension
A. Pre-existing condition (anisocoria)
In the elderly which of the following findings is most likely caused by an acute injury?

A. Edema of the lower extremities
B. Hypotension
C. Loss of lung tissue elasticity
D Decreased peripheral vision
B. Hypotension