DU PA Resp Em/airwy Word Scramble
|
Embed Code - If you would like this activity on your web page, copy the script below and paste it into your web page.
Normal Size Small Size show me how
Normal Size Small Size show me how
Question | Answer |
Feeling of difficult, labored or uncomfortable breathing | Dyspnea |
Rapid physical exam for respiratory distress | Oropharynx, neck, cardiac, chest exam, pulmonary, skin |
What do you look for in the oropharynx in the setting of respiratory distress | Appearance of uvula, foreign body |
What do you look for in the neck exam in the setting of respiratory distress | Tracheal deviation, distended neck veins, stridor |
What do you look for in the cardiac exam in the setting of respiratory distress | Rate and rhythm |
What do you look for in the chest exam in the setting of respiratory distress | Equal rise, trauma |
What do you look for in the pulmonary exam in the setting of respiratory distress | Rales, crackles, wheezing, equal breath sounds |
What do you look for in the skin exam in the setting of respiratory distress | Color, temperature, diaphoresis |
Arbitrarily defined as a Pao2<60mmHg, correlates with O2 sat 90% | Hypoxia |
Segmental fracture of 3 or more adjacent ribs in two or more places of each individual rib, results in paradoxical respiration | Flail chest |
Tall lanky guy who smokes, with sudden onset of dyspnea, what is it | Tension pneumothorax |
Chest pain worse on breathing in, leaning forward, and on palpation | Pleuritic chest pain |
Accumulation of fluid in alveoli resulting in impaired gas exchanged and subsequent hypoxia | Pulmonary edema |
Characterized by inflamed airway tissue and excessive mucus production | COPD |
COPD treatment | Steroids, use of NIPPV:CPAP or BiPAP, careful use of O2 (goal of PaO2 at least 60mmHg), broad spectrum antibiotics |
History: pleuritic chest pain, dyspnea (may be intermittent), cough, hemoptysis, anxiety. Physical findings: tachypnea, tachycardia, fever, hypotension, signs of DVT. What is it | Pulmonary embolism |
Do you get a d-dimer on patients who you have a high suspicion or low suspicion for pulmonary embolism | Low |
Cornerstone of treatment for pulmonary embolism | LMWH, heparin, coumadin |
Biggest reason to perform the Sellick maneuver | To prevent aspiration |
flail chest: indicators for early intubation include | persistent arterial Po2<80, shock, age>65, severe head injury, comorbid pulmonary disease |
what should be done immediately for the patient with a tension pneumo | 14-16 ga catheter should be inserted into anterior chest wall (2nd intercostal space at midclavicular line) |
what is the definitive treatment for a tension pneumo | inflation of affected lung with evacuation of pleural air via a chest tube |
who is at risk for aspiration pneumonia | nursing home patients, alcoholics, patients on sedatives, narcotics users, patients with GERD |
what are some causes of non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema | drug overdose, sepsis, pulmonary contusion |
treatment for pulmonary edema | 100% O2, noninvasive positive pressure vent CPAP or BiPAP (consider intubation for obtunded patients), NTG, morphine, diuretics (Lasix), foley (for the lasix you just gave), treat underlying cause |
what are the two phases of asthma | acute bronchoconstriction, sub-acute airway inflammation and mucous plugging |
what are some ominous signs of impending respiratory failure in someone with asthma | a quiet chest, agitation or confusion |
what are red flags in an asthma patient | fever, productive cough, immunosuppression, elderly or very young |
asthma treatment | supplemental oxygen, beta agonist (albuterol/smooth muscle relaxation), anticholinergic (atrovent/decreased mucuous production), epinephrine(if impending resp failure), steroids (treat late phase and prevent rebound) |
characterized by inflamed airway tissue and excessive mucus production. coughing on most days for 3 month in 2 consecutive years | COPD |
alveoli loose ability to stretch and thus become weak, and break resulting in inability of the lung to exchange CO2 and O2 | emphysema |
what is the treatment goal of COPD | PaO2 of at least 60mmHg |
what are some hypercoagulable states (in PE) | malignancy, pregnancy, postpartum, estrogen use, genetic mutations, Pro C/S deficiency |
risk factors for pulmonary embolism | hyper-coagulable state, vascular injury, venous stasis |
bed rest > __ hours can lead to venous stasis and put the patient at risk for PE | 48 |
gold standard for the diagnosis of PE | pulmonary angiography |
causes of cardiogenic pulmonary edema | h/o CHF or ESRD, new onset arrhythmia, medication noncompliance, dietary indiscretion |
pulmonary edema: ancillary tests | Pulse Ox, blood gas, BNP, chemistry, cardiac markers, EKG; Urine/Serum, toxicology screen |
Pulmonary embolism: ancillary imaging tests | Doppler US; CT (may miss small peripheral PE); V/Q scan; pulmonary angiography |
Pulmonary embolism: tx | Anticoagulation (cornerstone of tx; LMWH, hep, warfarin); thrombolysis (for pts in extremes); embolectomy (rare); IVC filter (recurrent DVT/PE pt on anticoag) |
miller laryngoscope blade | straight; Lifts epiglottis directly |
macintosh laryngoscope blade | curved; Lifts valecula (indirectly lifting epiglottis) |
ET tube sizes | M 8.0-8.5; F 7.0-7.5; infants/kids: estimate by diameter of pinky finger |
LEMON | Look externally; Evaluate 3-3-2; Mallampati; Obstruction; Neck mobility |
BURP | Backward, Upward, Rightward, Pressure on thyroid cartilage (studies don't support benefit of either maneuver) |
Created by:
bwyche
Popular Medical sets