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Pediatric Drowning Incident with Cardiac Arrest

A 5-year-old child is pulled from a swimming pool, unresponsive and apneic. Bystanders report that the child had been submerged for approximately 2-3 minutes before being rescued. The child is cyanotic and has absent respirations with no pulse. The child’s condition appears critical, and it is unclear if there are any additional injuries.

What action addresses the most immediate threat in drowning?

A 5-year-old is pulled from a swimming pool unresponsive and apneic. What is your first priority?

What intervention supports oxygenation in respiratory arrest?

The child remains apneic but has a pulse. What is the next step in management?

What action is first-line in cardiac arrest?

The child loses their pulse despite effective rescue breathing. What is your next step?

What medication increases heart rate and contractility in PEA?

The child's rhythm is pulseless electrical activity (PEA). What is the next recommended medication?

What warming techniques are safe and effective for moderate hypothermia?

The child is hypothermic with a core temperature of 30°C (86°F). What is the best approach to rewarming?

What intervention protects the brain after ROSC?

After ROSC, the child remains unresponsive. What is the next priority?

What is a common and reversible cause of bradycardia?

During post-ROSC care, the child develops bradycardia. What is the first step in managing this?

What fluid strategy minimizes risks in neurologically unstable children?

What is a key consideration when administering fluids during post-ROSC care?

What factor directly correlates with hypoxic brain injury in drowning?

The child’s family asks about long-term outcomes. What factor most strongly predicts neurologic recovery?

What approach targets the root cause of ongoing oxygenation issues?

After ROSC, the child has persistent hypoxemia despite adequate ventilation. What is the next step?

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