Term
Which medical gases support combustion |
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Definition
"Helium, Oxygen, Air, Nitrous oxide, Nitric oxide, Heliox (He/O2), CO2, " |
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Term
Which gases are nonflammable |
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Definition
"nitrogen (N), Helium (He), Carbon dioxide" |
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Term
How is water content removed from medical air |
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Definition
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Term
What is DOTC and ICC folowed by on the shoulder of a compressed gas cylinder |
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Definition
(Interstate commerce commission) followed by cylinder classification such as 3A or 3AA and normal filling pressure in pounds per square inch |
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Term
What is below DOT and ICC on the shoulder of a compressed gas cylinder |
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Definition
"letter size of the cylinder (E, G, etc)" |
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Term
WHat is on the third line below DOT and ICC on the shoulder of a compressed gas cylinder |
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Definition
mark of ownership followed by stamp or mark identifying inspecting authority |
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Term
WHat is on the opposite side of a compressed gas cylinder |
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Definition
an abbreviation indicating the method of cylinder manufacture and information regarding the original safety test and dates of all subsequent tests |
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Term
"What does the notation ""EE"" followed by a # indicate on the shoulder of a compressed gas cylinder" |
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Definition
the elastic expansion of the cylinder in cubic centimeters under test conditions |
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Term
What does an asterik next to the test date on the shoulder of a compressed gas cylinder indicate |
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Definition
DOT approval for 10-year testing |
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Term
what does a plus sign next to the test date on the shoulder of a compressed gas cylinder indicate |
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Definition
the cylinder is approved for filling to 10% above its service pressure |
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Term
What is something about compressed gas cylinders regarding coding |
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Definition
it's color coded and labeled |
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Term
How is duration of flow calculated from an H cylinder of oxygen |
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Definition
duration of flow (min) = 3.14 (factor for H cylinder) * pressure/flow. Note that the factors for: G cylinder is 2.41; E is 0.28 and D is 0.16 |
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Term
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Definition
standards for threaded high-pressure connections between large compressed gas cylinders and their attachments |
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Term
What are the large compressed gas cylinders |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Pin indexing applies to valve outlets of small cylinders up to and including E. |
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Term
What type of connection is used for PISS |
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Definition
"yoke type where the upper yoke fits over the lower valve stem. Two pins, projecting from the inner surface of the yoke connector, mate with two pinholes bored into the valve stem. Proper pin position aligns the small receiving nipple of the hyoke with the recessed cylinder valve outlet" |
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Term
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Definition
"ASS and PISS provide standards for high pressure connections between cylinders and equipment, the DISS was established to prevent accidental interchange of low pressure (less than 200 psig) medical gas connectors. " |
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Term
Where are DISS connections typically found |
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Definition
"at the outlets of pressure-reducing valves attached to cylinders, at the station outlets of central piping systems and at the inlets of blenders, flowmeters, ventilators, and other pneumatic equipment" |
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Term
WHat does the DISS system consist of |
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Definition
"externally threaded body and a mated nipple w/ a nut. as the two parts are joined, the shoulders of the nipple and the bores of the body mate and the union is held tgether by a hand-tightened hex nut. indexing is achieved by varying the dimensions of the borings and shoulders" |
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Term
"An intubated mechanically ventilated patient is using an HME and starts to develop thick, tenacious secretions. what action should be taken?" |
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Definition
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Term
WHat happens when a bourdon gauge encounters back-pressure resistence |
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Definition
(bourdon gauge is a flowmeter device that is used in combination with an adjustable pressure-reducing valve). The pressure difference across the orifice and actual output flow decrease. the bourdon gauge flow reading depends on upstream pressure which stays constant. the gauge reading would be falsely higher than the actual delivered flow because it measures upstream pressure. the gauge registers flow even when the outlet is completely blocked |
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Term
Why is oxygen monitored closedly with COPD patients |
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Definition
"COPD patients with chronic hypercapnia ventilate less. Patients hypoventilate when given oxygen because of suppression of the hypoxic drive. Normal response to PCO2 is blunted. The primary stimulus to breathe being lack of O2 as sensed by peripheral chemoreceptors. The increase in O2 levels supresses chemoreceptors, depresses ventilatory drive, and elveates PCO2. High blood oxygen levels may disrupt the normal V/Q balance and cuse an increase in dead space to Vt ratio and an increase in PaCo2" |
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Term
What action would you take when removing a flowmeter from the wall outlet and there is a sudden massive gas leak |
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Definition
"try to reinsert and pull back out again due to a valve not properly closing. If this doesn't work, leave in the wall until it can be fixed" |
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Term
What are the advantages of a SVN vs MDI |
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Definition
"less patient coordination required, high doses possible, no CFC release" |
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Term
what are some disadvantages of MDI vs SVN |
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Definition
"Pt coordination required, Pt activation required, high percentage of pharyneal deposition, risk of abuse, difficult to deliver high doses, not all meds are available, most units still use ozone-depleting CFCs." |
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Term
"How is total flow from an air entrainment calculated. EX. 50% O2, 15L/min" |
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Definition
liters air/liters )2 = (100-%02)/(%02-21) ex. ansser is 41L/min |
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Term
What are the clincial signs/indications of hypoxemia (abnormal deficiency of oxygen in arterial blood) |
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Definition
"PaO2<60 mmHg or Sao2 <90% on room air; PaOc of SaO2 below desirable range for clinical situation; also, tachypnea - tachycardia - cyanosis, distressed overall appearance." |
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Term
What is retinopathy of preamturity |
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Definition
abnormal eye condition occurs in some premature or low-birth weight infants who receive supplemental oxygen. An excessive blood oxygen level causes retinal vasoconstriction which leads to necrosis of blood vessels. |
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Term
"with retinopathy of prematurity, what happens in response to necrosis of blood vessels" |
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Definition
new vessels form and increase in number. Hemmorhage of these delicate new vessels causes scarring behind the retina. |
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Term
"in retinopathy of prematurity, what does scarring behind the retina often lead to" |
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Definition
detachment and blindness. |
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Term
Who does ROP affect most often |
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Definition
"neonates up to approx. one month of age, by which time the retinal arteries have sufficienty matured" |
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Term
What is Bernoulli's principle |
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Definition
fluid's lateral pressure varies inversely with velocity |
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Term
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Definition
total gas pressure = sum of partial pressures |
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Term
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Definition
rate of diffusion of a gas is inversely proportional to the square root of its gram molecular weight |
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Term
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Definition
solubility of a gas in liquid is proportion to its pressure if temp is constant and the gas does not react with the liquid |
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Term
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Definition
Hyperbaric oxygen therapy and is the therapeutic use of oxygen at pressures greater than 1 atm. Pressures during HBO therapy usually are expressed in multiples of atmopheric pressure absolute (ATA) |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
What pressures are more HBO therapy conducted at |
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Definition
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Term
What are the physiologic effects of HBO therapy |
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Definition
"bubble reduction (boyle's law), hyperoxygenation of blood and tissue (henry's law), vasoconstriction, enhanced host immune function, neovascularizatoiin" |
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Term
What acute conditions benefit from HBO therapy |
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Definition
"decompression sickness, air or gas embolism, carbon monoxide and cyanide poisoning, acute traumatic ischemi, crush injuries and limb suturing, clostridial gangrene, necrotizing soft tissue infection, ischemic skin graft or flap" |
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Term
What are some chronic conditions that benefit from HBO therapy |
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Definition
"diabetic wounds of lower extrmeties and other non-healing wounds, refractory osteomyelitis, actinomyosis (chronic systemic abscesses), Radiation necrosis (as an adjunct to conventional treatment)" |
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Term
Nitric oxide is used primarily for what purpose? |
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Definition
To treat neonates with hypoxic respiratory failure with associated pulmonary hypertension. |
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Term
"what are some potential, but currently not used uses for inhaled NO" |
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Definition
"ARDS, persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn, pulmonary hypertension follwing cardiac surgery, cardiac transplantation, acute pulmonary embolism, COPD, congental diaphragmatic hernia, sickle cell disease, testing pulmonary vascular responsiveness" |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
what kind of method is used to create aerosol in a USN |
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Definition
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Term
USN - how does the crystal transducer create aerosol |
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Definition
"converts radio waves into high-frequency mechanical vibrations(sound). these virbrations are transmitted t aliquid surface wher ethe intense mechanical energy creates a cavitation in the liquid, forming a standing wave or geyser which sheds aerosol droplets. vibrational energy is transmitted either indirectly through a water-filled couplant reservoir or directly to a solution chamber. Gas entering the chamber inlet picks up the aerosol particles and exits through the chamber outlet" |
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Term
What do the properties of the ultrasonic signal in a USN signal determine |
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Definition
the characteristics of the aerosol generated by these nebulizers. |
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Term
what does the frequenchy of the USN signal determine |
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Definition
determines aerosol particle size which is inversely proportional to signal frequency |
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Term
WHat does signal amplitude of USN signal determine |
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Definition
"ignal aplitude directly affects the amount of aerosol produced. the greater the amplitude the greater the volume of aerosol output. Unlike frequency, signal amplitude may be adjusted by the clinician" |
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Term
What is the treatment for laryngitis or croup |
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Definition
cool mist nebulizer - mist tent |
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Term
what are the indications for the use of humidity therapy |
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Definition
"primary: humidifying dry medical gases, overcoming the humidity deficit created when the upper airway is bypassed. Secondary: managing hypothermia, treating bronchospasm caused by cold air" |
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Term
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Definition
"special-purpose large-volume nebulizer. used especially for the administration of ribavirinto infants with respiratory synctial virus infection. it incorporates a drying chamber with its own flow control to produce a stable aerosol. it reduces medical gas source from teh normal 50 pounds per square inch gauge (psig) line pressure to as low as 26 psig with an adjustable regulator. used to treat infants with RSV, respiratory synctial virus treated ribaririn" |
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Term
what does one cubic foot of liquid oxygen equal |
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Definition
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Term
WHat devices are capable of delivering 100% relative humidity at BTPS |
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Definition
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