PALS version A

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You are caring for a child who was resuscitated after a drowning event. The child is intubated and ventilated with 100% oxygen with equal breath sounds and exhaled CO2 detected. The heart rate is slow and the monitor shows sinus bradycardia. The skin is cool, mottled, and moist; distal pulses are not palpable and the central pulses are weak. Intravenous access has been established. The core temperature is 37.3oC. Based on the PALS bradycardia algorithm, which of the following should be provided first?

Epinephrine IV
Transcutaneous pacing
Atropine IV
Dobutamine IV infusion
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Terms in this set (23)
You are caring for a child who was resuscitated after a drowning event. The child is intubated and ventilated with 100% oxygen with equal breath sounds and exhaled CO2 detected. The heart rate is slow and the monitor shows sinus bradycardia. The skin is cool, mottled, and moist; distal pulses are not palpable and the central pulses are weak. Intravenous access has been established. The core temperature is 37.3oC. Based on the PALS bradycardia algorithm, which of the following should be provided first?

Epinephrine IV
Transcutaneous pacing
Atropine IV
Dobutamine IV infusion
You are caring for a 5-year-old patient with supraventricular tachycardia (heart rate = 220/min). The child is lethargic. The skin is pale and cool with delayed capillary refill. Distal pulses are not palpable. Which of the following would be the best treatment to provide without delay?

Place cold packs on the distal upper and lower extremities
Ask the child to blow through a small straw
Exert light pressure on the eyes bilaterally
Provide synchronized cardioversion at 0.5 to 1 J/kg
You are initiating treatment for a child with septic shock and hypotension. While administering high-flow oxygen you determine that the child's respirations are adequate and SpO2 is 100%. You have just established vascular access and obtained blood samples. Which of the following is the next most appropriate therapy to support systemic perfusion?

Administer repeated fluid boluses of isotonic colloid
Administer repeated fluid boluses of isotonic crystalloid
Begin immediate dopamine infusion
Begin immediate dobutamine infusion
You are treating an 8-year-old with ventricular tachycardia with pulses and adequate perfusion. You attempted synchronized cardioversion without success. While seeking expert consultation, it would be most appropriate to:

Administer a loading dose of milrinone
Consider possible metabolic and toxicologic causes
Initiate overdrive pacing transcutaneously
Deliver an unsynchronized shock
You are caring for a 2-year-old unconscious patient who is intubated and receiving mechanical ventilation. The child's heart rate suddenly drops to 40/min and his color becomes mottled. You should respond to these changes by:

Increasing the ventilator rate
Increasing tidal volume
Increasing positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP)
Using a resuscitation bag provide manual ventilation with 100% oxygen
You are caring for a 9-month-old patient with pronounced respiratory distress. You initiated high-flow oxygen using a nonrebreathing mask about 10 minutes ago and established intravenous access. Initially the infant's heart rate was in the 150/min range with strong pulses. Suddenly the infant's respiratory rate falls to 6/min with significant intercostals retractions, and little air movement is heard. The infant becomes cyanotic and the heart rate decreases to 95/min. Which of the following treatments would be best for you to provide now?

Administer epinephrine IV
Provide bag-mask ventilation
Administer magnesium sulfate IV
Intubate and ventilate
Which of the following is likely to be the most helpful technique to identify potentially reversible metabolic and toxic causes during the attempted resuscitation of a young child in cardiac arrest?

Obtaining a urine sample for toxicology screen
Obtaining chest and abdominal radiographs
Soliciting a history from the caregiver or family
Obtaining a venous blood gas
You are caring for a patient who developed a tension pneumothorax after several hours of positive-pressure ventilation. Which of the following would be the most appropriate site for needle decompression?

Over the third rib at the midclavicular line
Under the eighth rib at the midaxillary line
Over the fifth rib at the sternal border
Under the sixth rib at the midclavicular line
You attempted synchronized cardioversion for an infant with supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) and poor perfusion. The SVT persists after the initial 1 J/kg shock. Which of the following should you attempt now?

Synchronized cardioversion at a dose of 2 J/kg
Synchronized cardioversion at a dose of 4 J/kg
Unsynchronized cardioversion at a dose of 2 J/kg
Unsynchronized cardioversion at a dose of 4 J/kg
You are treating a 5-month-old with a 2-day history of vomiting and diarrhea. The patient is listless. The respiratory rate is 52/min and unlabored. The heart rate is 170/min and pulses are present but weak. Capillary refill is delayed. You are administering high-flow oxygen, and intravenous access is in place. At this point the most important therapy is to:

Administer an epinephrine bolus
Begin bag-mask ventilation
Provide a rapid 20 ml/kg isotonic crystalloid fluid bolus
Administer a bolus of 0.5 g/kg of dextrose