100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached
logo-home
ATLS EXAM Questions and Answers Updated (2023 / 2024) (Verified Answers $11.09   Add to cart

Exam (elaborations)

ATLS EXAM Questions and Answers Updated (2023 / 2024) (Verified Answers

  • Course
  • Institution

ATLS EXAM Questions and Answers Updated (2023 / 2024) (Verified Answers) Which of the following is the recommended Method for trestemt frostbite? A. Vasodilators B. Anticigulants C. Warm (40 degrees) water D. Padding and elevation E. Application of heat from a hairdryer C. Warm (40 degrees) ...

[Show more]

Preview 4 out of 33  pages

  • May 27, 2024
  • 33
  • 2023/2024
  • Exam (elaborations)
  • Questions & answers
avatar-seller
ATLS EXAM Questions and Answers Updated
() (Verified Answers)
Which of the following is the recommended Method for trestemt frostbite?
A. Vasodilators
B. Anticigulants
C. Warm (40 degrees) water
D. Padding and elevation
E. Application of heat from a hairdryer
C. Warm (40 degrees) water


Which of the following physical findings suggest a cause of hypotension other than spinal cord injury?
A. Prispism
B. Bradycardia
C. Diaphragmatic breathing
D. Presence of deep tendon reflexes
E. Ability to flex forearms but not extend them
D. Presence of deep tendon reflexes. Spinal shock refers to loss of muscle toe (flaccidty) and loss of
reflexes.


The primary indication for transferring A patient to a higher level trauma center is:
A. Unavailibility of surgeon or operating staff
B. Multiple system injuries, including severe head injury
C. Resource limitations as determined by the transferring doctor
D. Resource limitations as determined by the hospital administration
E. Widened mediastinum on chest x-ray following blunt trauma
C. Resource limitations as determined by the transferring doctor (MÅ SJEKKES)


A young man sustains a rifle wound to the mid-abdomen. He is brought promptly to the ED by
prehospital personnel. His skin is cool and diaphoretic, and his systolic blood pressure is 58mmHg.
Warmed crystalloid fluids are initiated without improvement in his vital signs. The next, most
appropriate, step is to perform:
A. a laparotomy
B. An abdominal CT-scan
C. Diagnostic laparoscopy
D. Abdominal ultrasonography
E. A diagnostic peritoneal lavage
A. Laparotomy because of hemodynamic abnormality


A 42-year-old man is trapped from the waist down beneath his overturned tractor for several hours
before medical assistance arrives. He is awake and alert until just before arriving in the ED. He is now
unconscious and responds only to painful stimuli by moaning. His pupils are 3mm in diameter and
symmetrically reactive to light. Prehospital personnel indicate that they have not seen the patient
move either of his lower extremities. On examination in the ED, no movement of his lower extremities
are detected, even in response to painful stimuli. The most likely cause for this finding is:
A. An epidural hematoma
B. A pelvic fracture
C. Central cord syndrome
D. Intracerebral hemorrhage
E. Bilateral compartment syndrome
MÅ SJEKKES

,A 6-year-o boy is struck by an automobile and brought to the ED. He is lethargic, but withdraws
purposefully from painful stimuli. His blood pressure is 90mmHg systolic, heart rate 140 beats per
minute and his respiratory rate is 36 breaths per minute. The preferred route of venous access in this
patient is:
A. Percutaneous femoral vein cannulation
B. Cutdown on the saphenous vein at the ankle
C. Intraosseous catheter placement in the proximal tibia
D. Percutaneous peripheral veins in the upper extremities
E. Central venous access via the subclavian or internal jugular vein
D. Percutaneous peripheral veins in the upper extremities


A young man sustains a gunshot wound to the abdomen and is brought promptly to the ED by
prehospital personnel. His skin is cool and diaphoretic, and he is confused. His pulse is thready and his
femoral pulse is only weakly palpable. The definitive treatment in managing this patient is to:
A. Administer O-negative blood
B. Apply external warming devices
C. Control internal hemorrhage operatively
D. Apply a pneumatic antishock garment (PASG)
E. Infuse large volumes of intravenous crystalloid solutions.
C. Control internal hemorrhage operatively


Regarding shock in the child, which of the following is FALSE?
A. Vital signs are age-related
B. Children have greater physiologic reserves than do adults
C. Tachycardia is the primary physiologic response to hypovolemia
D. The absolute volume of blood loss required to produce shock is the same as in adults
E. An initial fluid bolus for resuscitation should approximate 20ml/kg Ringers Lactate
D. The absolute volume of blood loss required to produce shock is the same as in adults


A 33-year-old man is struck by a car travelling at 56km/h (35mph). He has obvious fractures of the left
tibia near the knee, pain in the pelvic area, and severe dyspnea. His heart rate is 182 beats per
minute, and his respiratory rate is 48 breaths per minute with no breath sounds heard in the left
chest. A tension pneumothorax is relieved by immediate needle decompression and tube
thoracostomy. Subsequently, his heart rate decreases to 144 beats per minute, his respirartory rate
decreases to 36 breaths per minute and his blood pressure is 81/53 mmHg. Warmed Ringers lactate is
adminstered intravenously. The next priority should be to:
A. Perform external fixation of the pelvis
B. Obtain abdominal and pelvic CT-scans
C. Perform arterial embolization of the pelvic vessel
D. Perform diagnostic peritoneal lavage or FAST
E. Perform a urethrogram and cystogram
D. Perform diagnostic peritoneal lavage or FAST


A 42-year-old man, injured in a motor vehicle crash, suffers a closed head injury, multiple palpable left
rib fractures, and bilateral femur fractures. He is intubated orotracheally without difficulty. Initially,
his ventilations are easily assisted with a bag-mask device. It becomes more difficult to ventilate the
patient over the next 5 minutes, and his hemoglobin oxygen saturation level decreases from 98% to
89%. The most appropriate next step is to:
A. Obtain a chest x-ray
B. Decrease the tidal volume
C. Decrease PEEP
D. Increase the rate of assisted ventilations
E. Perform needle decompression of the left chest.

,A. Obtain a chest x-ray (MÅ SJEKKES)


A 30-year-old man sustains a severely comminuted, open, distal right femur fracture in a motorcycle
crash. The wound is actively bleeding. Normal sensation is present over the lateral aspect of the foot
but decreased over the medial foot and great toe. Normal motion of the foot is observed. Dorsalis
pedis and posterior tibial pulses are easily palpable on the left, but heard only by Doppler on the right.
Immediate efforts to improve circulation to the injured extremity should involve:
A. Immediate angiography
B. Tamponade of the wound with a pressure dressing
C. Wound exploration and removal of bony fragments
D. Realignment of the fracture segments with a traction splint
E. Fasciotomy of all four compartments in the lower extremity
B. Tamponade of the wound with a pressure dressing


An 18-yeard-old, unhelmeted motorcyclist is brought by ambulance to the ED following a crash. He
had decreased level of consciousness at the scene, but then was alert and conversational during
transportation. Now his GCS is only 11. Which of the following statements is TRUE?
A. Cerebral perfusion is intact
B. Intravascular volume status is normal
C. The patient is in a postictal state
D. Intra-abdominal visceral injury is unlikely
E. The patient probably has an acute epidural hematoma
E. The patient probably has an acute epidural hematoma


A previously healthy, 70kg (175 pound) man suffers an estimated acute blood loss of two liters. Which
one of the following statements apply to this patient?
A. His pulse pressure will be widened
B. His urinary output will be at the lower limits of normal
C. He will have tachycardia, but no change in systolic blood pressure
D. His systolic blood pressure will be decreased with a narrowed, pulse pressure
E. His systolic blood pressure will be maintained with an elevated diastolic pressure.
E. His systolic blood pressure will be maintained with an elevated diastolic pressure.


The physioclogic hypervolemia of pregnancy has clinical significance in the management of the
severely injured gravid woman by
A. Reducing the need for blood transfusion
B. Increasing the risk of pulmonary edema
C. Complicating the management of closed head injury
D. Increasing the volume of blood loss to produce shock/maternal hypotension
E. Reducing the volume of crystalloid required for resuscitation
D. Increasing the volume of blood loss to produce shock


A 17-year-old helmeted motorcyclist loses consciousness when he is struck broad side by an
automobile at an intersection. He arrives in the ED with a blood pressure of 140/92, pulse rate 88
beats per minute, a respiratory rate of 18 breaths per minue, and a GCS of 7. Appropriate initial
immobilization of this patient should include a semi-rigid cervical collar and:
A. A scoop stretcher
B. A long spine board
C. A short spine board
D. Cervical traction tongs
E. Pneumatic antishock garment
B. A long spine board

, During an altercation, a 36-year-old man sustains a gunshot wound above the nipple line on the right,
with an exit wound posteriorly above the scapula on the right. He is transported by ambulance to a
community hospital. He is endotracheally intubated, close tube thoracostomy is performed, and 2
liters Ringers lactate solution are infused via 2 large-caliber IV´s. His blood pressure now is
60/0mmHg, heart rate is 160 beats per minute, and respiratory rate is 14 breaths per minute
(ventilated with 100% O2). The most appropriate next step in managin this patient is:
A. Laparotomy
B. Diagnostic peritoneal lavage
C. Arterial blood gas determination
D. Administer packed red blood cells
E. Chest X-ray to confirm tube placement
E. Chest X-ray to confirm tube placement


Abscence of breath sounds and dullness to percussion over the left hemithorax are findings best
explained by:
A. Left hemothorax
B. Cardiac contusion
C. Left simple pneumothorax
D. Left diaphragmatic rupture
E. Right tension pneumothorax
A. Left hemothorax


A 23-year-old man is brought immediately to the ED from the hospitals parking lot where he was shot
in the lower abdomen. Examination reveals a single bullet wound. He is breathing and has a thready
pulse. However, he is unconsious and has no detectable blood pressure. Optimale immediate
management is to:
A. Perform a diagnostic peritoneal lavage
B. Initiate infusion of packed red blood cells
C. Insert a nasogastric tube and urinary catheter
D. Transfer the patient to the operating room, while initiating fluid therapy
E. Initiate fluid therapy to return his blood pressure to normotensive
D. Transfer the patient to the operating room, while initiating fluid therapy


A teen-aged bicycle rider is hit by a truck traveling at high speed. In the ED, she is actively bleeding
from open fractures of her legs, and has abrasions on her chest and abdominal wall. Her blood
pressure is 80/50 mmHg, heart rate is 140 beats per minute, respiratory rate is 8 breaths per minute,
and GCS score is 6. The first step in managing this patient is to:
A. Obtain a lateral cervical spine x-ray
B. Insert av central venous pressure line
C. Adminster 2 liters of crystalloid solution
D. Perform endotracheal intubation and ventilation
E. Apply a pneumatic antishock garment (PASG) and inflate the leg compartments.
D. Perform endotracheal intubation and ventilation


An 8-year-old boy falls 4,5 meters (15 feet) from a tree and is brought to the ED by his family. His vital
signs are normal, but he complains of left upper quadrant pain. An abdominal CT-scan reveals a
moderately severe laceration of the spleen. The receiving institution does not have 24-hour-a-day
operating room capabilities. The most appropriate management of this patient would be to
A. Type and crossmatch for blood
B. Request consultation of a pediatrician
C. Transfer the patient to a trauma center

The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.

Quick and easy check-out

Quick and easy check-out

You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.

Focus on what matters

Focus on what matters

Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!

Frequently asked questions

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?

Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.

Who am I buying these notes from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller LectDan. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy these notes for $11.09. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

65005 documents were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy study notes for 14 years now

Start selling
$11.09
  • (0)
  Add to cart