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What are contributing factors to injuries related to blunt traumas?
The point of impact on the patient's body, the type of surface that is hit, the tissues ability to
resist (bone versus soft tissue, air-filled versus solid organs), and the trajectory of force.
What are the seven patterns of pathway injuries related to motor vehicle accidents?
Up and over, down and under, lateral, rotational, rear, roll over, and ejection.
Differentiate between the three impacts of motor vehicle impact sequence.
The first impact occurs when the vehicle collided with another object. The second impact
occurs after the initial impact when the occupant continues to move in the original direction of
travel until they collide with the interior of the vehicle or meet resistance. The third impact
occurs when internal structures collide within the body cavity.
What are the three factors that contribute to the damage caused by penetrating trauma's?
The point of impact, the velocity and speed of impact, and the proximity to the object.
What causes the primary effects of blast traumas?
The direct blast effects. Types of injuries include last long, tympanic membrane rupture and
middle ear damage, abdominal hemorrhage and perforation, global rupture, mild Trumatic
brain injury.
What causes the secondary effects of blast traumas?
Projectiles propelled by the explosion. Injuries include penetrating or blunt injuries or I
penetration.
What causes the tertiary effects of blast traumas?
Results from individuals being thrown by the blast wind. Injuries include hole or partial body
translocation from being thrown against a hard service: blunt or penetrating trauma's,
fractures, traumatic amputations. What causes quarternary effects of blast traumas?
All explosion related injuries, illnesses, or diseases not due to the first three mechanisms.
Injuries include external and internal burns, crush injuries, closed and open brain injuries,
asthmatic or breathing problems from dust smoke or toxic fumes, angina, or hyper glycemia
and hypertension.
What causes quinary effects of blasts traumas?
, Those associated with exposure to hazardous materials from radioactive, biologic, or chemical
components of a blast. Injuries include a variety of health effects depending on agent.
What are the three processes that transfer oxygen from the air to the lungs and blood stream
Ventilation: the active mechanical movement of air into and out of the lungs; diffusion: the
passive movement of gases from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower
concentration; and perfusion: the movement of blood to and from the lungs as a delivery
medium of oxygen to the entire body.
When would you use a nasopharyngeal airway versus an oral pharyngeal airway?
Nasopharyngeal airways is contraindicated in patients with facial trauma or a suspected
basilar skull fracture. Oral pharyngeal airways is used in unresponsive patients unable to
maintain their airway, without a gag reflex as a temporary measure to facilitate ventilation
with a bag mask device or spontaneous ventilation until the patient can be intubated.
Describe the measurement of an NPA
Measure from the tip of the patient's nose to the tip of the patients earlobe.
Measurement of an OPA
Place the proximal end or flange of the airway adjunct at the corner of the mouth to the tip of
the mandibular angle.
True or false: NPAs and OPAs are definitive airways.
False. When placing one of these? One should consider the potential need for a definitive
airway.
Name the three ways to confirm ETT placement
Placement of a CO2 monitoring device, Assessing for equal chest rise and fall, and listening at
the epigastrium and four lung fields for equal breath sounds.
When capnography measurement reads greater than 45MMHG, the nurse should consider
increasing or decreasing the ventilation rate?
Increasing the ventilation rate. Doing so would allow the patient to blow off retained CO2.
When capnography measurement reads less than 35MMHG, the nurse should consider
increasing or decreasing the ventilation rate?
Decreasing the ventilation rate. By doing so, the nurse allows the patient to retain CO2.
What are the three stages of shock