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AS11.1-6 | Oxygen Therapy and Airway Management Foundations — Practice Quiz

Practice 8 questions · Untimed · Unlimited attempts

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Q1 AS11.1 1 pt

A 68-year-old man with COPD is admitted with an acute exacerbation. His SpO₂ is 84% on room air and he is tachypnoeic. The attending physician wants to titrate oxygen to a target SpO₂ of 88–92% while delivering a precise, reproducible FiO₂. Which oxygen delivery device is most appropriate?

A Nasal cannula at 4 L/min
B Simple face mask at 6 L/min
C Venturi mask set at 28%
D Non-rebreather mask at 15 L/min
E High-flow nasal cannula at 60 L/min with FiO₂ 0.5

The Venturi mask is a fixed-performance device that delivers a precise, predetermined FiO₂ regardless of the patient's breathing pattern. The 28% adaptor is appropriate for titrated oxygen therapy in COPD, avoiding uncontrolled hyperoxia.

The Venturi mask is the fixed-performance device of choice when a precise FiO₂ is required — especially in COPD patients who may rely on hypoxic drive. The delivered FiO₂ is fixed by the jet size; increasing the oxygen flow beyond the specified rate does not improve FiO₂ precision.

The Venturi mask is the only device listed that guarantees a fixed FiO₂ in COPD. Nasal cannula and simple mask are variable-performance devices whose FiO₂ changes with respiratory rate and tidal volume. The non-rebreather mask delivers very high FiO₂ (60–90%) and is inappropriate here.

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Q2 AS11.2 1 pt

A 45-year-old woman is receiving oxygen via a simple face mask at 4 L/min following laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Her SpO₂ is 94%. The ward nurse reports she is breathing shallowly. You wish to increase the FiO₂. In addition to increasing the flow rate, which precaution must be observed to avoid CO₂ rebreathing with the simple face mask?

A Ensure the reservoir bag is fully inflated before each breath
B Maintain a minimum flow rate of at least 5 L/min to flush exhaled CO₂ from the mask
C Add a one-way inspiratory valve to the mask ports
D Switch to a nasal cannula at 6 L/min instead

The simple face mask has exhalation ports but no one-way valves, so exhaled CO₂ accumulates in the mask reservoir. A minimum flow of 5 L/min is required to flush this dead-space gas and prevent rebreathing of CO₂.

The simple face mask must never be run at less than 5 L/min; below this threshold, exhaled CO₂ accumulates in the mask body (volume ~100–200 mL) and is re-inhaled on the next breath. Adequate flow both delivers oxygen and flushes the dead space.

The reservoir bag belongs to the non-rebreather mask, not the simple mask. Adding valves to the simple mask would convert it to a different device. At 5 L/min via nasal cannula, FiO₂ is only ~40% — lower than a simple mask at adequate flow. The correct answer is maintaining a minimum 5 L/min flow through the simple mask.

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Q3 AS11.3 1 pt

A 30-year-old motorcyclist is brought in unconscious after a road traffic accident with suspected cervical spine injury. Emergency responders note gurgling sounds and inadequate breathing. Basic life support has been initiated. Which airway opening manoeuvre should be used as first priority in this patient?

A Head-tilt chin-lift
B Jaw thrust without head tilt
C Oropharyngeal airway insertion
D Immediate orotracheal intubation
E Neck extension with manual inline stabilisation

In suspected cervical spine injury, the jaw thrust (without head tilt) is the recommended primary airway manoeuvre because it opens the airway by displacing the mandible anteriorly without extending the neck, thereby minimising cervical cord movement.

The jaw thrust is the correct basic airway manoeuvre when cervical spine injury is possible. It opens the airway without cervical extension. If the jaw thrust alone is insufficient to maintain the airway, a cautious head tilt may be added — airway patency takes priority over spinal precautions.

The head-tilt chin-lift is contraindicated in suspected cervical spine injury as it extends the neck. Oropharyngeal airway insertion is an adjunct, not an opening manoeuvre, and requires a patent airway to be effective. Immediate intubation comes after basic manoeuvre failure. Neck extension is exactly what should be avoided.

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Q4 AS11.4 1 pt

During a simulation session, you are asked to insert an oropharyngeal airway (OPA) in an unconscious manikin. After sizing the OPA from the corner of the mouth to the earlobe, you attempt insertion. The correct initial orientation of the OPA during insertion into an adult patient is:

A Concave side facing downward (toward the tongue) throughout
B Concave side facing upward (toward the palate), then rotated 180° as it passes the soft palate
C Inserted sideways at 90° and then rotated into position
D Concave side facing downward throughout, using a tongue depressor to hold the tongue

In adults, the OPA is inserted with the concave side facing the palate (upward) to avoid pushing the tongue posteriorly. Once the tip reaches the soft palate, it is rotated 180° so the concave side faces downward, following the tongue curvature into the oropharynx.

Adult OPA insertion uses a 180° rotation technique: insert concave-side-up to glide along the palate, then rotate as the tip passes the soft palate so the curved flange follows the tongue. This prevents the tongue from being pushed posteriorly.

Inserting the OPA concave-side-down from the start can push the tongue backward and worsen obstruction. In children, a tongue depressor is used instead of the rotation technique (to avoid palatal injury), but in adults the rotation method is standard. A 90° lateral insertion is not the standard technique.

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Q5 AS11.4 1 pt

You have placed an oropharyngeal airway in an obtunded patient and she immediately starts retching and coughing. The most appropriate next action is:

A Firmly hold the OPA in place and reassure the patient
B Remove the OPA and insert a nasopharyngeal airway instead
C Sedate the patient to suppress the gag reflex
D Downsize to a smaller OPA

Retching and coughing indicate an intact gag reflex. The OPA is contraindicated in patients with an intact gag reflex due to risk of vomiting and aspiration. The NPA is better tolerated in semi-conscious patients because it does not contact the oropharynx.

The gag reflex is the OPA/NPA decision gate. An intact gag reflex (retching, coughing on OPA insertion) means the OPA is contraindicated. Switch to a nasopharyngeal airway, which is better tolerated in semi-conscious patients as it lies outside the oropharynx.

Holding an OPA in place in a gagging patient risks vomiting and aspiration. Sedation to suppress gag reflexes is a major intervention with its own risks and is not appropriate as a first-line response to a wrongly placed airway adjunct. Downsizing the OPA does not remove the stimulus to the oropharynx — the gag reflex is the decision gate, not the size.

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Q6 AS11.5 1 pt

A 55-year-old post-operative patient becomes unresponsive with a GCS of 6 and is found to have SpO₂ of 82% despite bag-valve-mask ventilation with 100% oxygen. His jaw is clenched and basic airway manoeuvres have failed. The most appropriate next step in management is:

A Insert a larger nasopharyngeal airway and continue bag-valve-mask ventilation
B Endotracheal intubation to secure a definitive airway
C Apply high-flow oxygen via non-rebreather mask
D Place in the recovery position and observe
E Administer IV fluids and recheck in 5 minutes

This patient meets the criteria for advanced airway management: inability to oxygenate (SpO₂ <90% despite BVM + 100% O₂), inability to protect the airway (GCS ≤8), and failure of basic manoeuvres. Endotracheal intubation is the definitive airway.

Advanced airway management is indicated when basic manoeuvres fail and any of: inability to oxygenate (SpO₂ <90% despite NRM/BVM), inability to ventilate (progressive hypercapnia), or failure of airway protection (GCS ≤8). Endotracheal intubation provides the most secure definitive airway.

Basic adjuncts have already failed; continuing with BVM or adjuncts alone will not resolve the problem. A non-rebreather mask requires a spontaneously breathing patient. Recovery position is for the unconscious patient with a patent airway — it does not solve active respiratory failure. IV fluids do not address airway or oxygenation failure.

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Q7 AS11.6 1 pt

A 70 kg male patient (ideal body weight 70 kg) is mechanically ventilated in volume-controlled mode following emergency laparotomy. The initial ventilator settings include tidal volume of 560 mL. Which of the following best describes why this tidal volume was chosen?

A It is 8 mL/kg of actual body weight, which is standard for all post-operative patients
B It is 8 mL/kg of ideal body weight (IBW), using a lung-protective strategy
C It is 10 mL/kg of IBW, the standard target for mechanical ventilation
D Tidal volume in ventilation is determined by minute ventilation, not body weight

Tidal volume for mechanical ventilation should be based on ideal body weight (IBW), not actual body weight. Lung-protective ventilation uses 6–8 mL/kg IBW. For a patient with IBW of 70 kg, 560 mL represents 8 mL/kg IBW — an appropriate lung-protective starting tidal volume.

Tidal volume for mechanical ventilation must be calculated using ideal body weight (IBW), not actual body weight. Lung-protective VT is 6–8 mL/kg IBW. An obese patient's lungs are not bigger — using actual weight risks volutrauma and ventilator-induced lung injury.

Using actual body weight in an obese patient would result in VT far exceeding lung capacity, causing ventilator-induced lung injury (VALI). 10 mL/kg is the older, now-abandoned target. While minute ventilation is relevant to CO₂ clearance, tidal volume is specifically set per IBW to avoid volutrauma.

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Q8 AS11.6 1 pt

A ventilated patient's arterial blood gas shows: pH 7.28, PaCO₂ 58 mmHg, PaO₂ 88 mmHg, HCO₃⁻ 26 mmol/L. The current ventilator settings are: TV 450 mL (IBW 70 kg), RR 12/min, PEEP 5 cmH₂O, FiO₂ 0.4. What is the priority adjustment?

A Increase FiO₂ to 0.6 to improve PaO₂
B Increase respiratory rate to 16/min to improve alveolar ventilation and reduce PaCO₂
C Increase PEEP to 10 cmH₂O to recruit alveoli
D Decrease tidal volume to 350 mL to reduce plateau pressure

The ABG shows respiratory acidosis (low pH, elevated PaCO₂) with normal HCO₃⁻ (no metabolic compensation yet), indicating acute hypoventilation. PaO₂ is adequate (88 mmHg on FiO₂ 0.4). The priority is to increase alveolar ventilation — most safely achieved by increasing respiratory rate.

When the ABG shows respiratory acidosis (high PaCO₂, low pH, normal HCO₃⁻), the ventilator adjustment needed is an increase in alveolar ventilation — either by increasing respiratory rate or tidal volume. Increasing RR is often preferred as it avoids increasing VT above safe lung-protective limits.

PaO₂ is acceptable; increasing FiO₂ does not address the high PaCO₂. PEEP primarily addresses oxygenation and alveolar recruitment, not CO₂ clearance. Decreasing tidal volume will worsen hypoventilation and further raise PaCO₂. The problem is insufficient minute ventilation causing CO₂ retention.

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