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Oxygen Therapy Fill In The Blanks

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Question: What does FIO2 for?Answer: Inspired Oxygen(O2).
Question: A person can go without oxygen for how many before irreversible brain damage?Answer: 6 Minutes.
Question: What happens when oxygen is ?Answer: Production of cellular metabolism is inadequate and death ultimately occurs.
Question: is?Answer: Tasteless and gas.
Question: Is Oxygen ?Answer: No, but it supports combustion.
Question: Is a drug?Answer: Yes, the U.S. Pharmacopeia defined O2 as a drug in the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act of 1962.
Question: What are available in Dalton's Law?Answer: 1. Nitrogen(78%) 2. Oxygen (21%) 3. Gases (1%).
Question: The average normal breathing consumes what percent of the 150 mmHg oxygen pressure?Answer: 30%
Question: What is ?Answer: The decreased partial amount of oxygen present in the human blood.
Question: When the 30% of oxygen usage then this creates what in the blood? Answer: .
Question: What is ?Answer: Is an abnormal low oxygen available to the body or individual or organ.
Question: What are the most sensitive to Hypoxia?Answer: The brain, heart, , and liver.
Question: What is Homeostasis?Answer: Is the body's ability to physiologically regulate its inner environment to ensure its in response to fluctuations in the outside environment.
Question: What can be indicators for the need of extra ?Answer: Increased cardiopulmonary , heart rate, blood pressure, and patients work of breathing.
Question: What % of keeps the lungs inflated?Answer: 78%
Question: What 2 units are oxygen in?Answer: Liter Per (LPM) and Percent Concentration (%).
Question: What 3 things must you have to deliver ?Answer: 1. Oxygen delivery device 2. Gas source 3. by which the two can be connected.
Question: What is an Oxygen Flowmeter?Answer: Green.
Question: What is an Air Flowmeter?Answer: .
Question: When should an oxygen device be removed from a ?Answer: Under no circumstances should an oxygen device be completely removed from the patient for the purpose of taking a radiograph without the consent or of a physician, respiratory care practitioner, or attending nurse.
Question: When transporting a patient with an oxygen cylinder what amount of oxygen should the patient get?Answer: The amount should match what the patient was at his/her bedside.
Question: Oxygen therapy is down into 2 parts what are they?Answer: Low flow and high flow.
Question: What is a low flow?Answer: Is a -oxygen concentration, a device that does not meet the entire inspiratory demand or needs of a patient.
Question: What is a high flow?Answer: A that meets or exceeds the inspiratory demands or needs of the patient.
Question: Which part high or low does not us to know the exact amount of oxygen the patient is receiving? Answer: Low flow.
Question: part high or low allows us to guarantee the amount of oxygen the patient is receiving?Answer: High flow.
Question: What Liter amount is the ?Answer: 1L=24% 2L=28% 3L=32% 4L=36% 5L=40% 6L=44%
Question: Humidification should be used flows past what LPM?Answer: 4 LPM.
Question: What are low flow?Answer: , Partial Rebreather, and Non-Rebreather.
Question: What are high flow?Answer: , Aerosol, Trach, and Face Tent.
Question: What % of oxygen supplied in a room to homeostasis?Answer: 21%.
Question: A properly positioned tube should be how?Answer: The distal tip should be 1 or 2 (3-5cm) superior to the tracheal bifurcation (Carina).
Question: What are Thoracostomy (intrapleural) , more commonly called chest tubes are used for what?Answer: To drain the intrapleural and the mediastinum.
Question: What are Central Venous (CV) ?Answer: Are catheters that are inserted into a vein.
Question: CV lines were initially developed to what?Answer: Chemotherapeutic and Parenteral Nutrition.
Question: What are CV lines also used for ?Answer: To administer a variety of drugs, manage fluid volume, serve as a conduit for analysis and transfusions, and monitor cardiac pressures.
 
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