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Terminal illness
A disease or condition that will eventually cause death.
Acute illness
A disease or condition that requires immediate attention.
Chronic Illness
A disease or condition that will last a long time or forever.
General hospital
Provides short-term care, acute care, diagnostic and rehabilitation services.
Specialty Hospital
Provides treatment for a specific condition such as cancer, mental health, or rehabilitation.
Practitioner's office (doctor's office)
Provides diagnosis, simple testing, treatments, and counseling services.
Long-term care center
24 hour supervised care.
Home Health Care
Provides care in the home of the patient.
Hospice care
Provides medical and psychological care for the terminally ill either in the home or in a hospice facility.
Assisted living facility
Provides residents a way to live alone or with someone else in an apartment, providing services as needed such as meals and healthcare.
Adult Day Care
Provides care throughout the day for the elderly.
Hearing, sight, smell
Senses used in making observations of your patients.
Sender sends message to receiver, receiver receives message, receiver provides feedback
The 3 steps to proper communication.
Verbal communication
Consists of words spoken or written and sounds.
Nonverbal communication
Communication without using language such as gestures.
Barriers to effective communication
Examples include using medical terminology when talking to the patient, language barriers, using slang, and using poor body language.
Cell
The smallest unit of life.
Tissues
Specialized cells come together to form this.
Organs
Tissues come together to form this.
Systems
Organs come together to form this.
Human body
Systems come together to form this.
Skin
The largest organ of the body.
Melanin
The pigment that gives skin color.
Disease or disorder
A change in the normal function or structure of a body part.
Handwashing
The most effective way to prevent the spread of infection.
Standard Precautions
CDC guidelines for infection control that are applied to all patients, all of the time.
PPE
Personal Protective Equipment.
1435
2:35 p.m. converted to military time.
500
5:05 a.m. converted to military time.
1:00 PM
1300 converted to regular time.
8:15 PM
2015 converted to regular time.
Proper body mechanics
Examples include no twisting at the waist, bending at the knees when lifting, lifting with your legs not your back, keeping back straight, and holding objects close to your body.
Atria
The top chambers of the heart.
Ventricles
The bottom chambers of the heart.
Systolic phase
The heart is contracting and squeezing/pushing out the blood.
Diastolic phase
The heart is relaxing/resting and filling back up with blood.
Pulse points
Temporal, carotid, apical, brachial, radial, femoral, popliteal, and pedal.
Aorta
The largest artery of the body.
Arteries
The majority of these vessels carry blood AWAY from the heart.
Cardiologist
A medical doctor specializing in the diagnosis and treatment of heart conditions.
Cardiology
The branch of medicine that deals with diseases and abnormalities of the heart.
Stenosis
the narrowing or stricture of a duct Canal or blood vessel
Lub-dub sound of the heart
the opening and closing of the heart valves.
Normal healthy blood pressure
120/80
Upper respiratory system
includes the nasal cavity, mouth, pharynx, and the larynx
Lower respiratory system
includes the trachea, bronchi, bronchioles, alveoli and capillaries.
Functions of the respiratory system
It exchanges gases between blood and the lungs; It helps regulate body temperature by cooling or warming the blood; it helps maintain the blood's electrolyte balance
Respiration
the act of breathing in and out
Inhalation
Breathing IN
Exhalation
Breathing OUT
Normal range of breaths per minute
16-20 times per minute
Apnea
the absence of breathing
Dyspnea
difficulty breathing
Red blood cells (erythrocytes) lifespan
90-120 days
White blood cells (leukocytes) lifespan
Up to 9 days depending on one's immune system
Function of leukocytes
Remove foreign particles and fight infection
Four main blood types
A, B, AB, and O
Pulse counting duration
To get an accurate reading, you should count for one full minute.
Normal pulse rate for an adult
60 to 100 beats per minute
Axial skeleton
includes 80 bones of the head and trunk of the body
Appendicular skeleton
includes 126 bones of the pelvis, shoulders, arms and legs
Classifications of bones
Long bones are longer than they are wide; short bones have similar length and width; flat bones are more flat than anything; irregular bones do not fit into the other categories.
Arthritis
Inflammation of the joints
Structures of the muscular system
The human body has over 600 muscles. There are three types of muscle tissue: skeletal muscles, visceral muscles, and cardiac muscles.
Functions of the muscular system
Muscles aid in movement of the body; muscles provide and maintain posture; muscles protect our internal organs; muscles provide movement of food, blood and waste products through the body; muscles open and close body openings; muscles produce heat.
Types of muscle movement
Flexion and extension; abduction and adduction; Rotation; supination and pronation.
Structures of the digestive system
include the mouth, salivary glands, pharynx, esophagus, stomach, small intestines (duodenum and ileum), large intestine (colon), and accessory organs (liver, gallbladder, pancreas).
Functions of the digestive system
The main function is to break down food to a form that can be used by the body cells.
Digestion Process
Includes transportation of food and waste, physical and chemical breakdown, absorption of digested food and final elimination of waste.
Mechanical Digestion
The mouth chews up the food to start the mechanical digestion process.
Salivary Glands
Produce saliva that moistens and lubricates the food and begins chemical digestion.
Pharynx
Where you swallow the food.
Esophagus
Transports the food from your pharynx to your stomach.
Stomach
Stores and turns the food into a digestible bolus of nutrients.
Small Intestine
Completes digestion by absorbing the nutrients.
Large Intestine
Reabsorbs water to create feces.
Rectum
Stores and expels the feces.
Anus
An opening for elimination of the feces.
Liver
Produces bile that aids in digestion, destroys poisons and toxins, destroys old blood cells and stores vitamins and iron.
Gallbladder
Stores the concentrate of bile and releases it into the duodenum to help break down food.
Pancreas
Produces insulin which helps regulate blood glucose levels and aids in digestion.
Gastrectomy
A removal of all or part of the stomach.
Cholecystectomy
Removal of the gallbladder.
Epiglottis
The flap that closes when food or water is swallowed, covering the trachea to prevent food and water from entering.
Cardiac Sphincter
The sphincter at the top of the stomach that allows food to enter into it.
Urinary System Structures
The structures are two kidneys, two ureters, one bladder, and one urethra.
Nephrons
Tiny structures in each kidney that filter the blood, with each kidney containing about 1 to 2 million nephrons.
Ureters
Small tubes composed of smooth muscle tissue that transport urine from the kidney to the bladder through peristaltic movement.
Bladder
A smooth muscular sac that expands as it fills with urine and can hold up to 1 L of urine.
Urinary System Function
Regulates the chemical composition of body fluids and removes body waste by filtering the blood.
Urologist
A specialist in issues related to the male and female urinary systems and also the male reproductive systems.
Nephrologist
A specialist who studies specifically the kidneys and would be the one ordering a patient's dialysis treatment.
Dialysis
The filtration of body fluids through a semipermeable membrane or machine instead of the kidneys to remove excess water and waste.
Hemodialysis
The filtration of blood from a vein filtered slowly through a machine and returned to the body, taking up to several hours and needing to be done two to three times a week.
Peritoneal Dialysis
A form of dialysis that uses the peritoneal membrane of the abdomen as a filter to remove waste from the body, performed at home with a surgically implanted tube.
Abdominal Cavity
Contains the stomach, gallbladder, pancreas, intestines, liver, spleen, adrenal glands, and kidneys.
Thoracic Cavity
Contains the lungs, heart, esophagus, trachea, and major blood vessels.
Pelvic Cavity
Contains the reproductive organs, bladder, and part of the digestive system.
Cranial Cavity
Contains the brain and some glands.
Spinal Cavity
Contains the spinal cord and nerves.