Paxton Patterson Emergency Medical Technician Practice Test

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Which is an appropriate approach for a pediatric patient with suspected epiglottitis or croup?

Aggressively inspect the airway and perform suctioning without calming the patient.

Nebulized epinephrine should be given immediately.

Place the child in a prone position without monitoring.

Maintain airway; provide humidified oxygen; avoid agitation; transport for evaluation.

In a pediatric patient with suspected epiglottitis or croup, the priority is preserving the airway and keeping the child calm to prevent worsening obstruction. The best approach is to maintain the airway, provide humidified oxygen to support breathing, avoid actions that increase agitation or provoke distress, and transport promptly for evaluation.

Keeping the airway means staying with the child, minimizing stimuli, and being ready to intervene if signs of airway compromise worsen. Humidified oxygen helps ease breathing and supports oxygen delivery during transport. Avoid agitation because crying or distress can trigger laryngospasm or further edema, making obstruction more dangerous. Aggressive airway inspection, unmonitored aggressive suctioning, or attempting maneuvers that provoke crying can worsen the situation. In addition, placing the child in a prone position without monitoring can impede breathing and complicate monitoring and transport. Transport to a facility where clinicians can evaluate and manage the airway safely is essential for definitive care.

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