Chest Injuries:
A flail chest occurs when:
A segment of the chest wall is detached from the thoracic cage
Pneumothorax is defined as:
Accumulation of air in the pleural space
Subcutaneous emphysema is an indication that:
Air is escaping into the chest wall from a damaged lung
The phrenic nerves control the diaphragm and exit the spinal cord at:
C3, C4, and C5
Signs and symptoms of a tension pneumothorax include all of the following except:
Collapsed jugular veins
The thoracic cavity is separated from the abdominal cavity by the:
Diaphragm
A simple pneumothorax:
Is commonly caused by blunt chest trauma
Which of the following organs or structures does not reside within the mediastinum?
Lungs
When a person is lying supine at the end of exhalation, the diaphragm:
Might rise as high as the nipple line
If a person's tidal volume decreases, but his or her respiratory rate remains unchanged:
Minute volume will decrease
If a patient with a chest injury only inhales small amounts of air per breath, he or she:
Must increase his or her respiratory rate to maintain adequate minute volume
The ______________ nerves supply the diaphragm:
Phrenic
Irritation or damage to the pleural surfaces that causes sharp chest pain during inhalation is called:
Pleurisy
A patient who presents with profound cyanosis following a chest injury:
Requires prompt ventilation and oxygenation
Elevation of the rib cage during inhalation occurs when:
The intercostal muscles contract
An open pneumothorax is:
an open chest wound through which air moves during breathing
Patients with rib fractures will commonly:
breathe rapidly and shallowly.
Hemoptysis is defined as:
coughing up blood
A rapid, irregular pulse following blunt trauma to the chest is most suggestive of a:
myocardial contusion
When assessing a patient with a hemothorax, you will most likely find:
signs and symptoms of shock