Semester 2 Verbal Final Practice

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BLUE

1.

Sternoclavicular JT

2.

Clavicle

3.

Coracoid process

4.

Acromioclavicular JT

5.

Lesser Tubercle

6.

Humerus

7.

Radius

8.

Ulna

9.

Medial border of scapula

10.

Superior angle of scapula

11.

Spine of scapula

12.

Neck of humerus

13.

Infraspinatus fossa

14.

Inferior angle of scapula

15.

Greater tubercle

16.

Bicepital groove

17.

Gleniod fossa

18.

Manubrium

19.

Supraspinatus fossa

20.

Subscapularis fossa

21.

Lateral border os dcapula

22.

AC ligament

23.

SC ligament

24.

Coracoidclavicular ligament

25.

Trapezius

26.

Levator Scapulae

27.

Rhomboid Major

28.

Rhomboid minor

29.

Serratus Anterior

30.

Sternocleidomastoid

31.

Pectoralis major

32.

Pectoralis minor

33.

Supraspinatus

34.

Infraspinatus

35.

Teres minor

36.

Subscapularis

37.

Latissimus Dorsi

38.

Triceps brachii

39.

Posterior deltoid

Semester 2 Verbal Final Practice

40.

Middle deltoid

41.

Anterior deltoid

42.

Teres major

43.

Biceps brachii

44.

Ribs

45.

Ilium

46.

Sacrum

47.

Coccyx

48.

ASIS

49.

Iliac crest

50.

PSIS

51.

AIIS

52.

PIIS

53.

Ischial tuberosity

54.

Pubic symphysis

55.

Head of femur

56.

Neck of femur

57.

Greater trochanter

58.

Lesser trochanter

59.

Femur

60.

Base of sacrum

61.

Acetabulum

62.

Gluteus maximus

63.

Gluteus medius

64.

Gluteus Minimus

65.

Biceps femoris

66.

Semitendinosus

67.

Iliotibial band

68.

Tensor fascia latae

69.

Semimembranosus

70.

Pectineus

71.

Adductor longus

72.

Adductor magnus

73.

Adductor brevis

74.

Gracilis

75.

Rectus femoris

76.

Vastus lateralis

77.

Vastus medialis

78.

Vastus intermedius

79.

Iliopsoas

80.

Sartorius

81.

SI JT

82.

Tibia

83.

Fibula

84.

Lateral Epicondyle of the knee

85.

Medial Epicondyle of the knee

86.

LCL

87.

MCL

88.

ACL

89.

PCL

90.

Medial meniscus

91.

Lateral meniscus

92.

Patella

93.

Medial condyle of knee

94.

Lateral condyle of knee

95.

Tibial tuberosity

96.

Fibular head

97.

Humphreys ligament

98.

Gastrocnemius

110.

111.

112.

113.

Lig.

114.

lig.

115.

116.

117.

arch

118.

99.

Peroneus longus

100.

Anterior tibialis

101.

102.

103.

104.

Soleus

Calcaneous

Talus

Navicular

105.

106.

107.

108.

109.

Cuneiforms

Cuboid

Metatarsals

Phalanges

Sesamoid

Ant. Talofib. Lig

Post. Talofib. Lig

Ant tibiofib. Lig

Post. Tibiofib.

Calcaneofibula

Deltoid lig.

Transverse arch

Longitudinal

Medial arch

Red

1.

Name CN 1 (olfactory)

2.

Name the CN that’s function is smell

(olfactory)

3.

What number is olfactory nerve (1)

4.

Name CN 2 (optic)

5.

Name the CN that’s function is vision (optic)

6.

What number is optic nerve (2)

7.

Name CN 3 (occulomotor)

8.

Name the CN that’s function is to move eyes, focus, pupil size (oculomotor)

9.

What number is oculomotor (3)

10.

Name CN 4 (trochlear)

11.

Name the CN that’s function is to rotate eyes (trochlear)

12.

What number is trochlear nerve (4)

13.

Name CN 5 (trigeminal)

14.

Name the CN that’s function is facial and head sensation (trigeminal)

15.

What number is trigeminal nerve (5)

16.

Name CN 6 (abducens)

17.

Name the CN that’s function is to move eyes laterally (abducens)

18.

What number is abducen nerve (6)

19.

Name CN 7 (facial)

20.

Name the CN that’s function is to control facial expressions, taste (facial)

21.

What number is facial nerve (7)

22.

Name CN 8 (acoustic)

23.

Name the CN that’s function is hearing and balance (acoustic)

24.

What number is acoustic nerve (8)

25.

Name CN 9 (glossopharyngeal)

26.

Name the CN that’s function is taste and swallowing (glossopharyngeal)

27.

What number is glossopharyngeal nerve (9)

28.

Name CN 10 (vagus)

29.

Name the CN that’s function is speech and swallowing (vagus)

30.

What number is vagus nerve (10)

31.

Name CN 11 (spinal accessory)

32.

Name the CN that’s function is to move neck and back muscles (spinal accessory)

33.

What number is spinal accessory nerve (11)

34.

Name CN 12 (hypoglossal)

35.

Name the CN that’s function is tongue movement (hypoglossal)

36.

What number is hypoglossal nerve (12)

37.

injury: headache, dizziness, amnesia, ringing in the ears (concussion)

38.

List 5 symptoms of a concussion (confusion, headache, dizziness, nausea, nystagmus, trouble concentrating, abnormal pupil response, amnesia)

39.

What is the balance test for a concussion

(Rombergs)

40.

What is Rombergs test used for (balance, concussion)

41.

Explain contra coup ( when they brain bounces of the front and back of skull)

42.

Injury: when they brain bounces of the front and back of skull (contra coup)

43.

Name the 4 bones that cover the lobes of the brain (frontal, parietal, temporal, occipital).

44.

Name a muscle that does eversion

(peroneus longus)

45.

Name a muscle that does inversion

(anterior tibialis)

46.

Name a muscle that does plantarflexion

(peroneus longus, gastrocnemius, soleus)

47.

Name a muscle that does dorsiflexion

(anterior tibialis)

48.

What movement does the peroneus longus do at ankle (eversion, plantarflexion)

49.

What movement does the anterior tibialis do at the ankle (inversion, dorsiflexion)

50.

What movement does the gastrocnemius do at the ankle (plantarflexion when knee extended)

51.

What movement does the soleus do at the ankle (plantarflexion when the knee is flexed)

52.

Injury: foot inversion, PF, with mild stretching of ATF (grade 1 inversion ankle sprain)

53.

Injury: moderate force in inversion, PF, complete tear of ATF and stretch of CF

(grade 2 inversion ankle sprain)

54.

Injury: severe force in inversion, PF, involving ATF, CF and PTF (grade 3 inversion ankle sprain)

55.

Injury: eversion force, DF, avulsion fx of medial malleolus in 15% of cases (eversion ankle sprain)

56.

Injury: forceful external rotation of the ankle (syndesmotic ankle sprain)

57.

Another name for a syndesmotic ankle sprain (high ankle sprain)

58.

Injury: weekend warrior injury, quick acceleration/jumping-type sports (achilles tendon rupture)

59.

Injury: abnormally short 1 st metatarsal and thus the 2 nd toe appears to be longer

(Morton’s toe)

60.

Injury: tension develops in the plantar fascia both during extension of the toes and during depression of the longitudinal arch

(plantar fasciitis)

61.

Injury: a fx at the base of the 5 th metatarsal

(Jones’s fx)

62.

Injury: a deformity at the head of the 1 st metatarsal (bunion)

63.

Injury: pain under the great toe, repetititive hyperextension of the great toe that eventually results in inflammation

(sesamoiditis)

64.

Injury: occurs in young, physically active patients, comparable to Osgood-Schlatter disease at tibial tubercle, traction injury at apophysis of calcaneus (Severs disease)

65.

Injury: Inflammatory condition that involves

Achilles tendon and/or its tendon sheath

(Achilles tendinitis/tenosynovitis)

66.

Injury: repetitive microtrauma, shinsplints

(Medial tibial stress syndrome)

67.

Injury: valgus stress to knee, mild ligament fibers torn or stretch (grade 1 MCL sprain of knee)

68.

Injury: valgus stress to knee, tearing of the capsule, partial tear of MCL (grade 2 MCL sprain of knee)

69.

Injury: valgus stress to knee, complete tear of MCL and supporting ligaments (grade 3

MCL sprain of knee)

70.

Injury: varus stress to knee, medial blow to knee (LCL sprain of the knee)

71.

Injury: torsion, pop, “feels like my knee is coming apart” (ACL sprain)

72.

Injury: severe hyperextension or a fall with knee flexed to 90 degrees (PCL sprain)

73.

Injury: firm foot fixation with rotary force while knee is extended or flexed, cutting motion, squatting, popping and clicking

(meniscus injury)

74.

Injury: sudden stretch/contraction of anterior thigh (quad strain)

75.

Injury: muscle fatigue, faulty posture, leg length discrepancy, tight posterior thigh, improper form (hamstring strain)

76.

Injury: inflammation from placing pressure on front of knee while kneeling or overuse

(knee bursitis)

77.

Injury: jumping, kicking, or running places tension, sudden and repetitive forceful extension of knee (patella tendonitis)

78.

Another name for patellar tendonitis

(jumpers knee)

79.

Injury: thigh rotates internally with lower leg rotates externally forces knee valgus and patella goes laterally (patella dislocation)

80.

Injury: apophysitis with pain at attachment of patellar tendon to tibial tuberosity, bony callus forms (Osgood-Schlatter disease)

81.

Injury: overuse condition, irritation at IT bands insertion & over lateral femoral epicondyle (IT band tendonitis )

82.

Another name for IT band tendonitis

(runner’s knee)

83.

ST: athlete lays on unaffected side, knee flexed @90 degrees, lift top let into abduction & slight hip extension, allow affected leg to drop into adduction (Ober’s test)

84.

What does Ober’s test test for (tight IT band)

85.

What is a special test for a tight IT band

(Ober’s test)

86.

ST: place foot on opposite extended knee of painful SI joint, apply pressure downward on bent knee (FABER’s test)

87.

What is another name for FABER’s test

(Patrick’s test)

88.

What does FABER’s/Patrick’s test test for (SI joint dysfunction)

89.

What is a special test for SI joint dysfunction

(FABER’s/Patrick’s test)

90.

ST: athletes lies supine with legs together,

ATC places hand under lumbar curve, 1

thigh is brought to chest flattening spine, return bent leg to extended position, lumbar curve returns (Thomas test)

91.

What does Thomas test test for (tight hip flexor)

92.

What is a special test for a tight hip flexor

(Thomas test, Kendall test)

93.

ST: athlete lies supine with knees off table, athlete brings one leg to their chest (Kendall test)

94.

What does Kendall test test for (tight hip flexor)

95.

ST: athlete stands, foot on unaffected side is lifted, look at iliac crest to see if it stays level (Trendelenburg’s test)

96.

What does Trendelenburg’s test test for

(weak abductors/gluteus medius)

97.

What is a special test for weak abductors

(Trendelenburg’s test)

98.

What is a special test for weak gluteus medius (Trendelenburg’s test)

99.

Injury: excessive repetitive movement in dancers, gymnasts, IT band moves over greater trochanter (snapping hip)

100.

Injury: severe blow or repeated blows to thigh usually in quads, lead to ectopic bone (myositis ossificans traumatica)

101.

Injury: direct blow to anterior thigh, mild hemorrhage, mild pain, no swelling, mild point tenderness (grade 1 quad contusion)

102.

Injury: direct blow to anterior thigh, deeper, pain, swelling, cannot flex knee more than 90 degrees (grade 2 quad contusion)

103.

Injury: direct blow to anterior thigh, moderate pain, moderate swelling, limping, cannot flex knee (grade 3 quad contusion)

104.

Injury: direct blow to anterior thigh, disability may split fasciae, severe pain, limited ROM, limp (grade 4 quad contusion)

105.

Injury: muscle torn during twist or pull while running or jumping, felt sudden twinge or felling of tearing in adductors

(groin strain)

106.

Injury: twists with both feet on ground, stumbles forward, falls backward, steps in hole (SI joint dysfunction)

107.

Injury: violent twisting produced by opponent, foot firmly planted and trunk forced in opposing direction, rare (hip sprain)

108.

Injury: seen in running sports, repetitive stress on pubis symphysis by surrounding muscles, pain in groin with running, squats, sit ups (osteitis pubis)

109.

Injury: most common in ischial tuberosity with hamstrings, sudden acceleration/deceleration, local pain

(avulsion fx)

110.

Injury: femur is adducted and flexed, deformity, rare (hip dislocation)

111.

Injury: blow to inadequately protected iliac crest (hip pointer)

112.

What is another name for a hip contusion (hip pointer)

113.

Injury: common at greater trochanter, from woman’s increased Q angle or leg length discrepancy, inflammation

(trochanteric bursitis)

114.

What is return to play protocol for concussion (symptom free, ImPact, neg. stress test)

115.

ImPact test is used for what (concussion clearance)

116.

prevents anterior translation of the tibia (ACL)

117.

ACL prevents tibia from translating

(anteriorly)

118.

prevents posterior translation of the tibia (PCL)

119.

PCL prevents tibia from translating

(posteriorly)

120.

prevents against a valgus force of knee

(MCL)

121.

MCL of knee prevents this force (valgus)

122.

prevents against a varus force of knee

(LCL)

123.

LCL of knee prevents this force (varus)

White

1.

Injury: most frequent fx, FOOSHA, direct impact to middle 3 rd of bone (clavicular fx)

2.

Injury: direct blow, most likely to neck of humerus, mistaken for dislocation (proximal humerus fx)

3.

Injury: direct blow or indirect force applied to the length of bone axis (epiphyseal humerus fx)

4.

Injury: brief translation of humeral head without separation of joint surfaces (shoulder subluxation)

5.

Injury: forced abduction, external rotation and extension, direct impact to posterior or posterolateral aspect (shoulder anterior dislocation)

6.

Injury: forced adduction and internal rotation, fall on an extended and internally rotated arm

(shoulder posterior dislocation)

7.

Injury: FOOSHA, direct impact to tip of shoulder, mild point tenderness, discomfort during movement, no deformity, mild stretching of AC lig. (grade 1 AC sprain)

8.

Injury: FOOSHA, direct impact to tip of shoulder, tearing of AC lig., stretching of CC lig, moderate pain, unable to abduct arm thru full ROM (grade 2 AC sprain)

9.

Injury: FOOSHA, direct impact to tip of shoulder, rupture of AC & CC lig, dislocation of clavicle, gross deformity, severe pain (grade 3 AC sprain)

10.

Injury: forced abduction & external rotation, direct blow, pain with movement and palpation, decreased ROM (glenohumeral jt sprain)

11.

What also happens when a shoulder dislocates (glenohumeral jt sprain)

12.

Injury: overuse in overhead activity, pain in anterior upper arm (bicipital tenosynovitis/tendonitis)

13.

Injury: direct blow, mainly chronic like tendonitis, degeneration, mostly supraspinatus (shoulder impingement)

14.

Injury: build up of fluid, chronic inflammation, overuse, direct impact, subacromial most often

(shoulder bursitis)

15.

Injury: “stingers”, nerve damage by impingement or compression (thoracic outlet compression syndrome; TOCS)

16.

What does Hawkins-Kennedy test test for (shoulder impingement)

17.

What is a special test for shoulder impingement (Hawkins-Kennedy test, Neers test, empty can test, drop arm test)

18.

What does Neers test test for (shoulder impingement )

19.

What does empty can test test for (supraspinatus weakness, shoulder impingement)

20.

What does drop arm test test for (supraspinatus weakness, shoulder impingement)

21.

What is a special test for supraspinatus weakness (empty can test, drop arm test)

22.

What is a special test for bicipital tenosynovitis/tendinitis (Yergason’s test, Speeds test)

23.

What does Yergason’s test test for (bicipital tenosynovitis/tendinitis)

24.

What does Speeds test test for (bicipital tenosynovitis/tendinitis)

25.

What is a special test for glenohumeral sprain (load and shift test, Sulcus sign test, Apprehension crank test)

26.

What does load and shift test test for (glenohumeral sprain)

27.

What does Sulcus sign test test for (glenohumeral sprain)

28.

What does Aprehension crank test test for (glenohumeral sprain)

29.

What is a special test for AC sprain (piano key test, compression test)

30.

What does piano key test test for (AC sprain, clavicle fx)

31.

What does compression test test for in the shoulder (AC sprain, fx)

32.

What is a special test for an MCL sprain (valgus stress test of the knee)

33.

What does the valgus stress test of the knee test for (MCL sprain)

34.

What is a special test for an LCL sprain (varus stress test of the knee)

35.

What does the varus stress test of the knee test for (LCL sprain)

36.

What is a special test for an ACL sprain (anterior drawer test of the knee, Lachman’s test)

37.

What does the anterior drawer test of the knee test for (ACL sprain)

38.

What does the Lachman’s test test for (ACL sprain)

39.

What is a special test for a PCL sprain (posterior drawer test, posterior sag test)

40.

What does the posterior drawer test test for (PCL sprain)

41.

What does the posterior sag test test for (PCL sprain)

42.

What is a special test for a meniscus injury (McMurray’s click test, Apley’s compression/distraction)

43.

What does the McMurray’s click test test for (meniscus)

44.

What does the Apley’s compression/distraction test test for (meniscus)

45.

What percentage of ankle sprains are inversion sprains (90%)

46.

What percentage of ankle sprains are eversion sprains (10%)

47.

What is a special test for an ATF ligament sprain (Anterior drawer of the ankle)

48.

What does anterior drawer test of the ankle test for (ATF ligament)

49.

What is a special test for a CF ligament sprain (inversion talar tilt)

50.

What is a special test for a deltoid ligament sprain (eversion talar tilt, external rotation test/Kleiger’s )

51.

What does the inversion talar tilt test test for (CF ligament)

52.

What does the eversion talar tilt test test for (deltoid ligament)

53.

What does the external rotation test test for (deltoid ligament)

54.

What is the another name for external rotation test (Kleigers test )

55.

What is a special test for an ankle fx (bump test, squeeze test)

56.

What does the bump test test for (tib-fib fx)

57.

What is a special test for a syndesmosis injury (squeeze test)

58.

What does the squeeze test test for (syndesmosis injury, fx)

59.

What is a special test for Achilles tendon rupture (Thompson’s test)

60.

What does the Thompson’s test test for (Achilles tendon rupture)

61.

What is a special test for deep vein thrombosis (DVT test)

62.

What does the DVT test test for (deep vein thrombosis)

***A lot of carryover from Red***

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