My Crossword Maker Logo
Powered by BrightSprout
Save Status:
or to save your progress. The page will not refresh.
Controls:
SPACEBAR SWITCHES TYPING DIRECTION
Answer Key:
Edit a Copy:
Make Your Own:
Crucigrama Sopa de Letras Hoja de Trabajo
Calificar este Puzzle:
Log in or sign up to rate this puzzle.

Chapter 26- Bleeding

Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition
Horizontales
A condition in which the circulatory system fails to provide sufficient circulation to maintain normal cellular functions; also called shock.
The small blood vessels that connect arterioles and venules; various substances pass through capillary walls, into and out interstitial fluid, and then on to the cells.
The main artery that receives blood from the left ventricle and delivers it all the other arteries that carry blood to the tissues of the body.
A condition in which the circulatory system fails to provide sufficient circulation to maintain normal cellular functions; also called hypoperfusion.
A dressing impregnated with a chemical compound that slows or stops bleeding by assisting with clot formation.
A condition in which the circulatory low blood volume, due to massive internal or external bleeding or extensive loss of body water, results in inadequate perfusion.
A blood vessel, consisting of three layers of tissue and smooth muscle, that carries blood away from the heart
The smallest branches or the arteries leading to the vast network of capillaries.
The coughing up of blood.
A bruise from an injury that causes bleeding beneath the skin without breaking the skin; also see ecchymosis.
Blood in the urine.
Verticales
A nosebleed.
A life-threatening fracture of the pelvis caused by a force that displaces one or both sides of the pelvis laterally and posteriorly.
Black, foul-smelling, tarry stool containing digested blood.
The bleeding control method used when a wound continues to bleed despite the use of direct pressure; useful if a patient is bleeding severely from a particular or complete amputation.
Vomited blood.
The narrowing of a blood vessel, such as with hypoperfusion or cold extremities.
Very small, thin-walled blood vessels.
The formation of clots to plug openings in injured blood vessels and stop blood flow.
A device that provides proximal compression of sever bleeding near the axial or inguinal junction with the torso.
A device to splint the bony pelvis to reduce hemorrhage from bone ends, venous disruption, and pain.
A hereditary condition in which the patient lacks one or more of the blood's normal clotting factors.
The circulation of blood within an organ or tissue in adequate amounts to meet the current needs of the cells.
A buildup of blood beneath the skin that produces a characteristic blue or black discoloration as the result of an injury; also see contusion.
A mass of blood that has collected within damaged tissue beneath the skin or in a body cavity.
The blood vessels that carry blood from tissue to the heart.