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Cardiogenic shock - ANSWERS---the type of shock caused by
inadequate function of the heart. This develops when the heart
cannot maintain sufficient output to meet the demands of the body
-caused by any disease or event which prevents heart pumping
-can occur directly after AMI up to 24 hours
Obstructive shock - ANSWERS--The type of shock that results when
conditions that cause mechanical obstruction of the cardiac muscle
also impact pump function
ex. cardiac tamponade, tension pneumothorax
Beck's triad - ANSWERS--Signs of a cardiac tamponade. JVD,
narrowing BP pressures, muffled heart sounds
Distributive shock - ANSWERS--The type of shock when there is
widespread dilation of the small arterioles, venules, or both. Blood
pools in the expanded vascular beds and tissue perfusion decreases
Types of distributive shock - ANSWERS--Septic shock caused by
severe infections; neurogenic shock caused by damage to the spinal
cord (bradycardia, low BP, warm skin); anaphylactic shock caused by
allergic reaction; psychogenic shock
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Hypovolemic shock - ANSWERS--The type of shock that results from
an inadequate amount of fluid or volume in the system
-15% of blood volume
How do you treat for shock? - ANSWERS--Keep the patient warm,
control bleeding, put the patient in a position of comfort, and
administer high-flow oxygen
brain damage without oxygen - ANSWERS---without enough oxygen,
cardiac arrest or brain damage occurs within about 4 minutes
-permanent brain damage within 6 minutes
-death likely within 10 minutes
FBAO - ANSWERS---signs of blockage include inability to cough or
speak or inability to ventilate patient
-bending patient forward at the waist, support chest with one hand,
use heel of hand to give 5 back blows between shoulder blades
-then 5 abdominal thrusts
-alternate between the two until object is dislodged
-if patient loses consciousness, give CPR starting with chest
compressions
-given even if patient has a pulse, so don't check
-before giving breaths, look inside mouth for any visible objects
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FBAO in children - ANSWERS---using thigh for support, lay facing
down along forearm; ensure head is lower than the body
-give 5 firm back blows between blades
-5 chest thrusts; place 2 to 3 fingers in the middle of the chest just
below the nipples. push down 1.5 inches.
-alternate, unless lose consciousness, then CPR
mouse to mouth/mouth to nose - ANSWERS---mouth to mouth
performed when patient does not have adequate breathing and
artificial ventilation not available
-open airway
-place barrier device
-pinch nose and form seal around patient's mouth
-check for FBAO if you do not see chest rise and fall
-give 1 breath every 5 to 6 seconds for adults and 1 every 3 for peds
Steps of CPR - ANSWERS--Determine unresponsiveness. Check for
breathing for up to 10 seconds. Check carotid pulse for up to 10
seconds. Begin CPR until AED is available. Give 30 compressions at
100 beats/min and then 2 breaths over the course of 1 second. Once
an advanced airway is inserted, ventilate at a rate of 8-10
breaths/min and do not stop compressions.
This is exactly the same for children, except two-rescuer CPR is 15:2.
If patient experiences a return of spontaneous circulation, ventilate
at a rate of 10-12 breaths/min.
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compression to breath ratios - ANSWERS--under 8 years old:
-2 provider: 15:2
-1 provider: 30:2
-one third of chest diameter
older:
-30:2 always
-2 inches
AED procedure - ANSWERS---if cardiac arrest was not seen by EMS,
give 5 cycles of 30:2 before defibrillating
-if cardiac arrest was seen, one EMT begins compressions and the
other applies AED
-if only one EMT available, apply AED immediately
-check for pulse 2 minutes after defib
-if no shockable rhythm, wait 2 minutes and re-analyze
When to place left lateral - ANSWERS--If patient has adequate
breathing and is uninjured. To maintain a patent airway in an
unresponsive patient.
What to do if you fail to ventilate - ANSWERS--If the breath doesn't
go in successfully, reposition the patient and try again. If there is still
nothing, assume there is a foreign body obstruction and begin CPR
on an unresponsive apneic patient. Continue to attempt ventilations
and open the mouth and look in every time.