Vascular Flashcards

1
Q

What does pitting edema look like?

A

when you press down on the skin and the indentation remains indented

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2
Q

What is skin turgor?

A

when you pinch the skin and the skin remains bunched up

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3
Q

K+ of >5.5mEq/L is associated with what EKG abnormalities? What happens in the heart at this time?

A

peaked T waves; repolarization abnormalities in heart

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4
Q

K+ of >6.5mEq/L is associated with what EKG abnormalities? What happens in the heart at this time?

A

P wave widens and flattens, PR segment lenthens, P waves eventually disappear; progressive paralysis of the atria

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5
Q

K+ of >7.0mEq/L is associated with what EKG abnormalities?

A

prolonged or bizarre QRS, AV block w/ slow junctional and vent escape rhythms, sinus brady or slow AF, development of sine wave

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6
Q

Delayed gastric emptying in diabetics is an effect of what?

A

neuropathy in the GI tract

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7
Q

What blocks would be used for an AV fistula?

A

brachial, axillary, supraclavicular

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8
Q

Why might high dose Nimbex be a good choice for rapid sequence to an AV fistula patient?

A

they may be hyperkalemic (no sux), they may have renal failure (caution roc & vec)

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9
Q

What fluid should likely be given to an AV fistula patient?

A

NS because they may have high electrolyte levels already

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10
Q

What opioids are contraindicated in renal failure patients?

A

morphine and demerol

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11
Q

Ketamine and propofol are sometimes used in what ratio?

A

1:10

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12
Q

How many units of heparin are typically given for an AV fistula?

A

5000

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13
Q

What procedure involves massive amounts of radiation?

A

TAAA

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14
Q

How often does heparin need to be re-checked?

A

hourly

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15
Q

How long after giving heparin should you wait before clamping?

A

3 min

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16
Q

What is the #1 morbidity of aorto bi-femoral bypass?

A

MI

17
Q

What are some physiological changes that arise when the tournequit is released? How do you treat these?

A

BP drop - treat w/ phenylephrine, ETCO2 increase - give 1/2 amp HCO3 or hyperventilate, temp decreases

18
Q

Where should you never place a Bairhugger? Why?

A

in an area of decreased perfusion such as a limb with significant PVD or an area distal to a tournequit or strap (where blood is pooling); it will “boil” the pooled blood and significantly burn the patient

19
Q

Why may acidotic patients not respond to HCO3?

A

Their vessels are maximally dilated because they do not have enough O2

20
Q

How many cc and mg protamine do you give per unit of heparin?

A

1cc (10mg) protamine per 1000 units heparin

21
Q

How does protamine deactivate heparin?

A

it binds and creates a salt