You have been called to a private residence for a ground-level fall. Your patient is a 74-year-old male who fell when he began to experience severe, crushing chest pain. The patient's BP is 138/98 and he is moaning due to his chest pain. The patient denies use of ED drugs within the last 48 hours and you decide to administer three doses at once of NTG (1.2 mg) SL simultaneously to the patient. Your patient's chest pain is alleviated and his blood pressure remains stable throughout transport. What have you done wrong?

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The NREMT exam asks questions on these topics: - Airway, Respiration & Ventilation - Cardiology & Resuscitation - Trauma - Medical/Obstetrics/Gynecology - EMS Operations All sections, except EMS Operations, have a content distribution of 85% adult and 15% pediatrics [based questions].  Topic weightage: For the EMT exam, 18%-22% of questions asked will cover airway, respiration, and ventilation; 20%-24% will cover cardiology and resuscitation; 14%-18% will cover trauma; 27%-31% will cover medical/obstetrics/gynecology; and 10%-14% will cover EMS operations.  For the EMR, advanced EMT... Show more

1. You have been called to a private residence for a ground-level fall. Your patient is a 74-year-old male who fell when he began to experience severe, crushing chest pain. The patient's BP is 138/98 and he is moaning due to his chest pain. The patient denies use of ED drugs within the last 48 hours and you decide to administer three doses at once of NTG (1.2 mg) SL simultaneously to the patient. Your patient's chest pain is alleviated and his blood pressure remains stable throughout transport. What have you done wrong?