Chapter 33 Environmental Emergencies
which of the following statements regarding lightning strikes is correct
Lighting often results in a brief period of asystole that resolves spontaneously
which of the following is an early sign of pit viper envenomation
Local swelling and ecchymosis
which of the following statements regarding drowning is correct
Patients with a submersion injury might deteriorate rapidly because of pulmonary injury and cerebral hypoxia
Breath-holding syncope is caused by a decreased stimulus to breathe and occurs when:
a swimmer hyperventilates prior to entering the water.
The MOST prominent symptom of decompression sickness is:
abdominal or joint pain.
A dysbarism injury refers to the signs and symptoms related to changes in:
barometric pressure
The diving reflex may allow a person to survive extended periods of submersion in cold water secondary to:
bradycardia and a slowing of the metabolic rate.
When a warm hand is immersed in water that is 70°F (21°C), heat is transferred from the hand to the water through a process called:
conduction
The transfer of heat to circulating air, such as when cool air moves across the body's surface, is called:
convection
Drowning is MOST accurately defined as:
death from suffocation after submersion in water.
High humidity reduces the body's ability to lose heat through:
evaporation
Geriatric patients, newborns, and infants are especially prone to hyperthermia because they:
exhibit poor thermoregulation
Covering a patient's _________ will significantly minimize radiation heat loss.
head
Common signs and symptoms of heat exhaustion include all of the following, EXCEPT:
hot, dry skin
to obtain the most accurate reading of a patients core body temperature, you should place a special hypothermia thermometer
into the patient's rectum.
The venom of a black widow spider is toxic to the:
nervous system
High air temperature reduces the body's ability to lose heat by:
radiation
Burns associated with lightning strikes are typically:
superficial
the two most efficient ways for the body to eliminate excess heat are
sweating and vasodilation
An air embolism associated with diving occurs when:
the diver holds his or her breath during a rapid ascent.