Chapter 24
As an EMT working at a mountain resort, you are presented with a 50-year-old female who states that she does not feel well. From your assessment, which of these findings would seemingly indicate that the patient is being adversely affected by the high altitude?
Complaint of dyspnea on exertion
A patient has been bitten by what appears to be a black widow spider. The bite to her left hand is dull and achy, and the patient states that the muscles in her shoulders and back are starting to hurt, as if they are cramping up. After ensuring that no life-threatening conditions are present and administering oxygen, the EMT should:
Keep the hand below the level of the heart
You are called for an elderly woman who has slipped on the ice. On arrival, you find her supine on an icy sidewalk and responsive to painful stimuli with decorticate posturing (flexion). She has blood coming from a laceration on the back of her head and is breathing agonally at 4 times a minute. What should you do immediately?
Perform the manual jaw-thrust maneuver
A 31-year-old groundskeeper has been stung by bees three times in his right arm and twice to his left ankle. After performing the primary and secondary assessments, which reveal no acute disturbances, what should you do next?
Attempt removal of any embedded stingers
An intoxicated 24-year-old female patient has been struck by lightning and is conscious but confused. Which of these assessment findings should the EMT investigate further first?
Irregular heartbeat
The EMT is correctly assessing the skin temperature of a patient who has been exposed to cold temperatures for an extended period of time when he:
Places the back of his hand on the patient's abdomen
After ensuring that there are no life-threatening conditions to the airway, breathing, and circulation, the priority in caring for a patient with hypothermia is:
Preventing additional heat loss
You are accompanying a team of hikers climbing a high mountain. In the morning, you are summoned to a tent and find one of the climbers confused and complaining of a headache. His airway is patent and respirations adequate. He has no medical history and was in good health until found this morning by his friend. You are suspicious of high-altitude cerebral edema (HACE). What should you do to help the patient?
Provide supplemental oxygen
In which of these settings will sweating be less effective as a means to cool the body?
Relative humidity of 98%
Which of these findings would present earliest in a patient with hypothermia?
Shivering
A patient with hypothermia is in cardiac arrest. The automated external defibrillator (AED) is applied and delivers one shock. Following the shock, what should the EMT do next?
Start cardiopulmonary resuscitation
The primary assessment of a teenage male patient who is unresponsive with hot, moist, and flushed skin reveals his airway to be open, breathing shallow, and radial pulse weak. You have initiated positive pressure ventilation with supplemental oxygen. What should you consider doing next?
Transfer the patient into the ambulance
Consumption of large amounts of water during prolonged periods of exertion can result in which disorder?
hyponatremia
A young female patient was weeding her garden when she was bitten on her left hand by an unidentified snake. The primary assessment does not reveal any life threats and vital signs are stable. In caring for this patient and her injury, it is critical that the EMT:
Have the patient remove her wedding ring from her left hand
You are treating a patient with suspected heat cramps. Your medical director has issued standing orders for such treatment given the high number of heat-related emergencies to which your service routinely responds in the summer months. Regarding these standing orders, which of these instructions would seem most appropriate?
Mix one teaspoon salt in one quart of water and administer half of a glass every 15 minutes
A patient is confused and combative after playing football in the open sun on an extremely hot day. On the field, you find his airway open, respirations tachypneic but adequate, and radial pulse rapid. The patient's skin is hot and dry. After deciding whether to provide spine motion restriction precautions, your next action would be to:
Move the patient to the air-conditioned ambulance
A patient has been struck by lightning at a picnic. A doctor on scene states that the patient was in cardiac arrest after the strike, but with 1 minute of CPR, has a heartbeat and weak sonorous respirations. The patient remains unresponsive. Which priority care should the EMT provide?
Perform the jaw-thrust maneuver
You are en route to the hospital with a patient who is unresponsive and has hot, dry skin. His friends state that the patient had been drinking and passed out in the hot sun for several hours before 911 was called. An Emergency Medical Responder is ventilating the patient with a bag-valve mask attached to supplemental oxygen. Which of these actions would be most beneficial to the patient next?
Place cold packs to the patient's groin and armpits
Which of these conditions, in addition to cool temperatures, is necessary for trench foot to develop?
Prolonged exposure to moisture
A young boy complains of pain to his fingers after spending several hours outside riding a sled in cold winter temperatures. After ensuring he has no life-threatening conditions, you turn your attention to his hands and note that the fingers are cold to the touch. You suspect that he is suffering from a superficial freezing cold injury. Which sign or symptom would help confirm this suspicion?
Skin on the fingers that is soft and numb
You have been called to a hunting camp for a patient with a severe freezing cold injury to his hand and fingers. The patient is suffering no life-threatening conditions and you elect to rewarm the affected areas. Which of these warming techniques would be most appropriate for this patient?
Thaw and rewarm the tissue as quickly as possible
Regarding snakebites, which of these statements is true?
The majority of snakebites involve nonpoisonous snakes
The stinger of a bee is evident in the left thigh of a female patient who states that she is allergic to bees and has an EpiPen for such occasions. According to the patient, the sting occurred two hours ago and she just now noticed that the stinger remains in place. She did not take her epinephrine and appears asymptomatic for an allergic reaction. At this time, you would:
Attempt removal of the stinger
Which of these patients with heat emergency would be the highest priority for transport?
A 19-year-old responsive to verbal stimuli with hot dry skin and tachycardia
The EMT should recognize which of these patients is experiencing generalized hypothermia?
A 21-year-old female who was trapped in cold water for 10 minutes before being rescued
An 18-month-old child has a temperature of 105.2degreesF. Without treatment, what will most likely occur?
Cellular dysfunction or seizures
You have been asked by your medical director to put together an emergency kit specifically for patients who have been stung or bitten by small marine life animals. Which of these items should you place in that kit?
Vinegar
What is the most significant mechanism by which the body can lose heat?
radiation
You are transporting a 44-year-old male patient who was stung multiple times by fire ants. Which of these statements made by the patient should concern you most?
"I am beginning to feel itchy all over and I'm developing hives."
When moving a patient with severe generalized hypothermia, which of these instructions is most appropriate to relay to your fellow EMS providers?
"I want everyone to take extra care in moving the patient very gently to the stretcher. We do not want her to go into cardiac arrest."
The EMT shows that he understands the danger of heat stroke when he states:
"In heat stroke, the body loses its ability to rid itself of excess heat, causing the core temperature to rise."
Which of these patients is losing body heat by the mechanism of convection?
A 30-year-old male in a cool temperature and exposed to a light breeze
What of these patients is most accurately described as suffering an environmental emergency?
An intoxicated male patient who collapsed in the snow and is complaining that he feels cold
Following a direct lightning strike, which symptoms should the EMT expect the patient to display?
Apnea
A patient with hypothermia is alert and confused, but complains of left arm pain. His friends found him outside, where the patient spent the night after he got drunk and passed out in the cold. It appears as though he has a localized freezing cold injury to the arm in question. In caring for this patient, which of these treatments would be acceptable?
Board splint the arm to keep it from moving
A patient has been bitten by a nonpoisonous grass snake. Your care would include:
Cleaning and dressing the wound
After successfully rewarming a patient's frozen foot and frozen toes, the EMT should:
Cover the foot and toes with dry, sterile dressings
When cooling a patient with possible heat stroke, which of these findings would be of most concern to the EMT?
Determining that the patient is now shivering after having cold packs applied to the neck
You have been called to a residence for a patient who is sick. On scene, the family tells you that the patient is being treated for "stomach flu" and has had a fever of 102degreesF for the past two days. She has been taking all of the medications prescribed by her doctor, but this evening became very "sweaty." Assessment shows her to be stable with a pulse of 88, respirations of 18 breaths/min, adequate blood pressure of 128/68 mmHg, and an oral temperature of 100.2degreesF. Based on these data, the EMT should recognize that:
The patient's body is cooling itself by transferring heat into the sweat, which is then evaporated into the air
In addition to brain injury from the high voltage and amperage, the patient who experiences a lightning strike also typically develops:
Trauma from air rushing out of and back in to the strike location
You are treating a male patient who is hypothermic. What should you do to decrease heat loss caused by radiation?
Wrap a towel around the patient's head
Medical direction has ordered you to begin rewarming an unresponsive patient with a core temperature of 93degreesF. Which of these measures would most benefit this patient?
Wrap the patient in several warm blankets
You are managing a patient who has been consuming large amounts of water while playing a sport outside for several hours. The patient presents with general malaise, has a severe headache, has vomited once, and complains of photophobia. The patient's core temperature is just slightly elevated, and you see bloating in his hands. During transport, in which position should this patient be placed?
fowler's position
When obtaining a history of a 5-year-old boy with generalized hypothermia, which question should be asked before all others?
"How long was he out in the cold?"
The EMT should recognize heat cramps as the probable cause of a patient's problem when the patient states:
"I have pain in my belly and legs."
Which thermometer should be utilized by an EMT when assessing the temperature of a patient with hypothermia?
Medical-grade thermometer in the patient's rectum
You are giving a talk on hunting safety. A hunter asks you when someone should attempt to rewarm a hand or foot that is frostbitten. What is your best response?
"Rewarming should take place only when there is no chance that the tissue will refreeze."
You are called to a construction site on a hot and humid day for a male patient with a heat emergency. On scene, you find a 49-year-old man who is responsive to verbal stimuli. Coworkers state that the patient had been moving concrete blocks all day in the hot weather and had not rested, eaten, or had anything to drink in the past two hours. During the primary assessment, you note the patient's airway to be open and breathing rapid but adequate. His radial pulse is rapid and bounding, and his skin is hot and dry. Which of these findings makes this patient a priority for immediate and rapid transport?
Hot and dry skin
You have been called for an alert and oriented male patient. Upon your arrival, his roommate states that the patient spent several hours locked out of his house in the cold temperatures after an evening of drinking since no one was home and the patient lost his house keys. Since the primary and secondary assessments have ruled out immediate life-threatening conditions, you have decided to rewarm the patient. Which of these warming techniques would be most appropriate for this patient?
Hot packs to the patient's chest, groin, and armpits
You are called to treat a homeless person who complains of an inability to walk due to sores and numbness of his feet. The EMR tells you that the patient is well oriented with good pulses and respiration but that his feet are edematous with open sores and broken-down skin. This finding is the typical result of which condition?
Immersion foot
Which of these statements about immersion hypothermia is false?
Immersion hypothermia typically does not occur until the water temperature is less than 35degreesF
A person is in a hot environment and his body is successfully compensating to off-load excess heat. Which assessment findings best illustrate this process?
Warm and diaphoretic skin, elevated heart rate, and increased respirations
You are providing a "stand-by" service at the county fair. At midmorning, a 50-year-old male patient approaches your tent and states that he was bitten in the right shoulder by some sort of insect and has tremendous pain. Assessment reveals his shoulder to have a large reddened area with a sting mark in the middle. The skin is warm to the touch. Your care of this patient should include:
Applying a cold pack to the site
You have been summoned to a field where a 32-year-old male patient has been struck by lightning. Emergency Medical Responders are with the patient, providing manual spine motion restriction. Once you arrive at the patient's side, what should you do first?
Assess the airway and breathing
You are first to arrive at the side of a pond where a boy playing hockey has fallen through the ice. The child is holding onto the ice at the edge of the break and has a distressed look on his face. Your immediate action would be to:
Instruct the patient to remain still until the rescue team arrives
You have been chosen by the medical director to give a 15-minute presentation on cold-related emergencies to a local volunteer fire department. In preparing the talk, which teaching point should you emphasize?
Emergency responders play a critical role in caring for hypothermic patients since the most important phase of care occurs during the first 30 minutes
On entering an apartment for a call related to a confused elderly female patient, you note that the air conditioner is running on high and the room is extremely cold. Which other clue obtained during the scene size-up would best indicate that this patient may be suffering from urban hypothermia?
Fan blowing directly onto the patient
Medical direction has asked you to remove a tick from behind the left ear of a 5-year-old girl. You would:
Grab the tick close to its head and pull directly outward
Which sign or symptom best indicates that the patient with cold skin is experiencing generalized hypothermia?
Heart rate of 48 beats/min
You are transporting a patient who was bitten on her hand by a spider approximately 20 minutes ago. On scene, the primary assessment revealed no life threats and vital signs were stable. While conducting the reassessment, which of these findings would be of most concern to the EMT?
Hives to the chest and abdomen
When treating a confused patient who has been exposed to high temperatures, which of these findings is most concerning?
Hot and dry skin
You have been called to a park for a teenage boy who is "sick." On scene, you find a 16-year-old male patient who knows his name but is confused about place and time. Friends state that they have been playing basketball most of the morning and afternoon. The temperature is in the 90s and the humidity is high. The patient's airway is patent and his breathing is fast but adequate. His pulse is weak and rapid. Observation of his skin reveals it to be pale, cool, and moist. Oxygen is being administered via nonrebreather face mask by Emergency First Responders. Which other step would be appropriate care for this patient?
Place him supine on the stretcher with feet elevated
A patient at a mountain ski resort presents to you with notable shortness of breath. She denies any past medical history and takes no medications. Your assessment reveals crackles to the bases of both lungs. After applying oxygen, you realize that the key to helping this patient improve is to:
Remove her to a lower altitude
A patient who is conscious and breathing has been pulled from a stream of cold water. To decrease her loss of heat via the mechanism of conduction, the EMT should immediately:
Remove her wet clothing
A 23-year-old female patient has been stung in the right arm by some unidentified marine life. Her arm and hand are swollen and red. The primary assessment is unremarkable and she is complaining of pain to the site of injury. You would:
Remove rings from the patient's right hand
You are assessing a conscious but confused hunter who became lost in the woods on a cold day. Your assessment shows him to have an open airway, adequate breathing, and a weak radial pulse. His skin is cold to the touch and he is shivering. The EMT should recognize that the:
Shivering is a protective means by which the body is attempting to warm itself
The EMT would recognize that a hypothermic patient's condition is deteriorating when he observes:
Slurred speech
A young man has been struck by lightning on a golf course and is in cardiac arrest. Other golfers say that he was struck 8-10 minutes ago. What should the EMT do immediately?
Start cardiopulmonary resuscitation
A landscaper who has been working in 105degreesF weather is found collapsed in a client's yard. He is responsive to painful stimuli and has an open airway. His breathing is shallow, alveolar breath sounds are absent, and radial pulse is weak. The patient's skin is hot and dry and appears to be sunburned. The EMT should immediately:
Start positive pressure ventilation
You are reassessing a patient whom you are treating for heat exhaustion. Which of these findings indicates that the patient is improving?
The mental status is now alert and oriented
A young male patient who was angry with friends wandered away from a party and spent the night outside uncovered in 40-50degreesF temperatures. He is confused, has decreased but adequate breathing, and has a weak radial pulse. His skin is cool and capillary refill delayed. You note that he is not shivering. Based on this presentation, what can you safely conclude?
The patient's body temperature is most likely dangerously low
Bystanders have called 911 for a female patient who lives on the street. She has been outside in the cold all night and is muttering incomprehensible words. Her airway is open and her breathing is adequate. Her skin is cold, and a radial pulse is present but weak. What should the EMT do next?
Transfer the patient to the ambulance
You have been called for a 78-year-old female patient who slipped while getting out of her bathtub. She is confused and cold to the touch. You learn that the patient slipped 24 hours ago and has been on the bathroom's tile floor ever since. Since it is summer, she also had her air conditioner running on high. The EMT would best categorize this emergency as:
Urban hypothermia with heat loss caused by conduction
The EMT shows she understands the regulation of temperature in the human body when she states:
"If the body becomes too hot or too cold, the brain will send instructions out to the body to either retain or lose heat."
A patient has been bitten by an unidentified snake. Which of these statements made by the patient would lead the EMT to believe that the snake was poisonous?
"Its head was triangular."
An Emergency Medical Responder (EMR) quickly checks the breathing and pulse of a patient with Alzheimer's disease who has been sleeping outside in the cold for several hours. The EMR informs you that the patient grimaces to painful stimuli but is not breathing and does not have a pulse. What is your best response?
"Let's perform the primary assessment again, and this time take longer to assess for breathing and a pulse."
You have been summoned to a beach for a young male patient who has been stung by jellyfish on both forearms. As the senior EMT on scene, which directions should you provide to the other EMS providers in providing proper care to this patient?
"Let's soak the arms in hot water."
You are on scene with a patient who has a freezing cold injury. The patient stated that he had no sensation in his hand or fingers prior to the initiation of a rewarming process. You have subsequently begun rewarming his hand and fingers. Which of these statements made by the patient following the rewarming process is of greatest concern?
"There is no pain when I rub my fingers with my other hand."
During an in-service program, your medical director asks if anyone can tell her the cause of heat cramps. What response would be most appropriate?
"They are caused when the patient's electrolytes such as salt and calcium become deranged and are too low in the body."
You have been called to a residence for a spider bite. On scene, the homeowner states that he was moving some boxes in his garage when he accidentally grabbed a spider and it bit him. He killed the spider and shows you a brown-colored spider with a "violin shape" on its back. He then states that the bite does not hurt and he sees no need to go to the hospital. As a knowledgeable EMT, you should state:
"You really need to go because the bite of that spider does not heal very well and will put you at risk for infection."
During the summer months, you work as an EMT at a first aid station that helps people who hike trails in the high mountains of the western United States. One afternoon, you are presented with a 42-year-old male patient who was just at an altitude of 14,000 feet while hiking. The patient states that while at this altitude he experienced a severe headache, became very uncoordinated and stumbled often, and felt very nauseous. He became scared, so he left the trail to be seen in the first aid station. The patient indicates that he feels better now. Given this description, what would be the most likely differential diagnosis?
High-altitude cerebral edema
During the summer months, you work as an EMT at a first aid station that helps people who hike trails in the high mountains of the western United States. One afternoon, you are presented with a 13-year-old male patient who presents as alert and oriented, but complains of chest pain, dyspnea, and a headache. He is tachypneic and tachycardic and has slight inspiratory crackles. Given this presentation, what would be the most likely differential diagnosis?
High-altitude pulmonary edema
You have been called to a football practice field on a very hot day for a heat-related emergency. On scene, you find a young male patient panting and lying under a tree. His skin is flushed, and teammates are continually wiping the sweat off his face, arms, and chest with towels. Which of these statements to his teammates would be most appropriate?
"Please let him sweat. It is helping his body cool down."
Which of these statements made by your EMT partner would require immediate correction when treating a patient with hypothermia and a deep freezing cold injury to his left foot, ankle, and lower leg?
"We will need to gradually rewarm the patient at a rate of 2-3degreesF per hour."
Which of these statements made by an EMT shows that he understands the care of a patient with a freezing cold injury to the foot?
"While it is recommended to remove wet clothing from the patient, it is best to leave clothing that is frozen to the skin in place."
A 44-year-old female patient was hiking in a state park when she was bitten by a snake in her left calf. To get help, she had to hike 4 miles to the first-aid station where you are located. The hike took her 1½ hours. Your assessment reveals a red and swollen area to her leg, and the patient complains of discomfort to that area. Closer inspection reveals two puncture wounds in the center of the affected area. The patient asks you if she is going to die from the snake bite. What would be your most appropriate reply?
"While you still need to get checked out, if venom was injected, the signs and symptoms of a generalized reaction typically appear very quickly."
You are caring for a patient with an extensive freezing cold injury to his right hand and arm. Which of these instructions would be appropriate to give to your EMT partner?
"Why don't we get that ring off his right ring finger."
When providing needed oxygen to a patient with a core temperature of 95degreesF and adequate breathing, which strategy is the best option?
Warmed and humidified oxygen delivered through a nonrebreather mask
You have been called by a family for their mother, who is "not acting right." On scene, you find the 69-year-old woman to be confused and seemingly slow in talking. Her airway is open and respirations are 12 breaths/min. Her pulse is 58 beats/min, and her skin is cool to the touch, despite the thermostat keeping the house at normal room temperature. The family states that she has been this way for about three days, but before then seemed to be doing well. Your partner obtains a blood pressure reading of 104/52 mmHg. When getting a medical history, which of these statements made by the family would make sense, given the presentation of the patient?
"Mom suffers from a low thyroid."
The primary center for controlling the temperature in the human body is located in the:
Hypothalamus
A 24-year-old female who was hiking in shorts informs you that she has been bitten by an insect on her leg. She states no other complaints. Assessment reveals a tick embedded in her leg. As an EMT, you should provide care to this patient by:
Removing the tick with tweezers
A 43-year-old male patient has removed a tick from his arm prior to your arrival. He is refusing all care at this time. Which of these statements made by the EMT would be most appropriate?
"Tick bites can result in bacterial infections, which can be very serious."