Practice Semester 1 Verbal Final 1. Midshaft of calf 2. Medial malleolus 3. Lateral malleolus 4. Base of 5th metatarsal 5. Calcaneus 6. Achilles tendon 7. Deltoid ligament 8. Syndesmosis 9. Posterior talofibular lig. 10. Anterior talofibular lig. 11. Phalanges of foot 12. Metatarsals 13. Cuneiforms 14. Cuboid 15. Navicular 16. Talus 17. Tibia 18. fibula 19. Frontal bone 20. Parietal bone 21. Occipital bone 22. Temporal bone 23. Sphenoid bone 24. Maxilla 25. Mandible 26. Mastoid process 27. ASIS 28. Iliac crest 29. Greater trochanter 30. Pubic symphysis 31. PSIS 32. Ischial tuberosity 33. SI joint 34. Adductor group 35. Iliopsoas 36. Sartorius 37. Rectus femoris 38. Vastus medialis 39. Vastus lateralis 40. Gracilis 41. Pectineus 42. Gluteus maximus 43. Gluteus medius 44. Biceps femoris 45. Semitendinosus 46. Semimembranosus 47. IT band 48. Tensor Fascia latea 49. Cranial nerve 1 (olfactory) 50. Olfactory nerve tests? (smell) 51. Cranial nerve 2 (optic) 52. Optic nerve tests? (vision) 53. Cranial nerve 3 (oculomotor) 54. Oculomoter nerve tests? (eye mvmt, pupil constr.) 55. Cranial nerve 4 (trochlear) 56. Trochlear nerve tests? (eye mvmt) 57. Cranial nerve 5 (trigeminal) 58. Trigeminal nerve tests? (head & face sens.) 59. Cranial nerve 6 (abducens) 60. Abducens nerve tests? (Lat. Eye mvmt.) 61. Cranial nerve 7 (facial) 62. Facial nerve tests? (taste, facial Mvmt) 63. Cranial nerve 8 (Acoustic) 64. Acoustic nerve tests? (hearing & equilibrium) 65. Cranial nerve 9 (Glossopharyneal) 66. Glossopharyneal nerve tests? (swallowing & taste) 67. Cranial nerve 10 (vagus) 68. Vagus nerve tests? (speech, swallowing) 69. Cranial nerve 11 (spinal accessory) 70. Spinal accessory nerve tests? (mvmt of neck & shld) 71. Cranial nerve 12 (hypoglossal) 72. Hypoglossal nerve tests? (mvmt of tongue) 73. Anterior drawer tests: (ATF) 74. List test for ATF (anterior drawer) 75. Inversion talar tilt tests: (CF) 76. List test for CF: (inversion talar tilt) 77. Eversion talar tilt tests: (deltoid lig.) 78. List test for deltoid lig.: (eversion TT, kleigers/ER test 79. Bump test tests: (fracture) 80. List a test for fracture: (bump, tap, squeeze) 81. Squeeze test tests: (high ankle sprain/syndesmosis) 82. List a test for high ankle sprain/syndesmosis: (squeeze) 83. Thompson’s test tests: (Achilles tendon rupture) 84. List a test for Achilles tendon rupture: (Thompson’s) 85. Deep vein thrombosis tests: (DVT) 86. List a test for DVT: (deep vein thrombosis) 87. Perform AROM ankle inversion. 88. Perform AROM ankle eversion. 89. Perform AROM ankle plantarflexion 90. Perform AROM ankle dorsiflextion 91. Perform PROM ankle inversion. 92. Perform PROM ankle eversion. 93. Perform PROM ankle plantarflexion 94. Perform PROM ankle dorsiflextion 95. Perform RROM ankle inversion. 96. Perform RROM ankle eversion. 97. Perform RROM ankle plantarflexion 98. Perform RROM ankle dorsiflextion 99. List a muscle that does ankle inversion: (Ant. Tib., Post. Tib., ext. hall. Long., flex. Hall. Long., flex. Dig. Long.) 100. List a muscle that does ankle eversion: (ext. dig. Long., per. Tert., per. Long., per. Bre.) 101. List a muscle that does ankle plantarflexion: (per. Long., per. Bre., gastrco., soleus, plantaris, flex. Hall. Long., flex. Dig. Long., post. Tib.) 102. List a muscle that does ankle dorsiflexion: (ant. Tib., ext. hall. Long., ext. dig. Long., per. Tert.) 103. Ober’s test tests: (tight IT band, bursitis) 104. List a test for tight IT band: (Ober’s) 105. List a test for trochanteric bursitis: (Ober’s) 106. FABER’s/Patrick’s test tests: (SI joint dysfunction) 107. List a test for SI joint dysfunction: (FABER’s/Patrick’s) 108. Thomas test tests: (tight hip flexor) 109. List a test for tight hip flexor: (Thomas, Kendall’s) 110. Kendall test tests: (tight hip flexor) 111. Trendelenburg’s test tests: (weak abductors, weak gluteus medius) 112. List a test for weak hip abductors: (Trendelenburg’s) 113. Perform AROM hip flexion. 114. Perform AROM hip extension. 115. Perform AROM hip abduction. 116. Perform AROM hip adduction. 117. Perform AROM hip external rotation. 118. Perform AROM hip internal rotation. 119. Perform PROM hip flexion. 120. Perform PROM hip extension. 121. Perform PROM hip abduction. 122. Perform PROM hip adduction. 123. Perform PROM hip external rotation. 124. Perform PROM hip internal rotation. 125. Perform RROM hip flexion. 126. Perform RROM hip extension. 127. Perform RROM hip abduction. 128. Perform RROM hip adduction. 129. Perform RROM hip external rotation. 130. Perform RROM hip internal rotation. 131. List a muscle that does hip flexion: (iliopsoas, rectus femoris, Sartorius, tensor fasciae latae) 132. List a muscle that does hip extension: (gluteus maximus, semitendinosus, semimembranosus, biceps femoris, piriformis) 133. List a muscle that does hip abduction: (gluteus medius, tensor fasciae latae, gluteus minimus, piriformis) 134. List a muscle that does hip adduction: (gracilis, adductor magnus, adductor longus, adductor brevis, pectineus) 135. List a muscle that does hip external rotation: (Sartorius, adductor magnus, adductor longus, adductor brevis, pectineus, piriformis, superior gemellus, inferior gemellus, obturator internus, obturator externus, quadratus femoris, gluteus maximus) 136. List a muscle that does hip internal rotation: (tensor fasciae latea, gluteus medius, gluteus minimus, 137. Inversion, plantarflexion; stretch of ATF, mild symptoms: (grade 1 inversion ankle sprain) 138. Moderate force in inv., PF; complete tear of ATF, stretch of CF; moderate symptoms: (grade 2 inversion ankle sprain) 139. Severe force in inv., PF; involving ATF, CF & PTF; severe symptoms: (grade 3 inversion ankle sprain) 140. Eversion and dorsiflexion; possible avulsion Fx of medial malleolus; pain over foot and lower leg; unable to bear wt.; inv. & ev. Cause pain: (eversion ankle sprain) 141. Common in football; forceful external rotation of ankle; severe pain, loss of function, major pain with PROM ER; pain along antero-lateral ankle: (high ankle sprain, syndesmotic sprain) 142. Weekend warrior; quick acceleration or jumping sports; report feeling a “kick” in back of calf; loud pop or snap; can’t PF: (Achilles tendon rupture). 143. Blunt trauma to head; severe headache; blood in ear or nose; skin indentation: (skull Fx) 144. Direct/indirect trauma to head; confusion; headache; dizziness; nausea: (concussion). 145. Blow to head; may be slow bleed; show signs of mild headache but then severe head pains; dizziness; unequal pupils: (intracranial hemorrhage) 146. Blow to head; extremely fast bleed; 10-20 mins. Go from fine to major symptoms: (epidural bleeding). 147. Verins are torn that bridge dura matter to brain; contrecoup; bleeding is slow; s/s may not appear for hours: (subdural bleeding). 148. Force trauma to brain; bleeding within brain; deterioration of neurological function: (intracerebral bleeding). 149. Happens after a head injury; impaired memory; lack of concentration; anxiety; depression: (post concussive syndrome). 150. Second head injury before s/s of initial injury go away; caused 30-40 deaths over last decade: (second impact syndrome). 151. Result of continuously wet unevaporated sweat; benign condition associated with red, raised rash, combined with prickling with sweat: (head rash; prickly heat). 152. Associated with rapid fatigue and overexposure; standing in head for long periods; dizziness; fainting: (head syncope; heat collapse). 153. Painful muscle spasms due to excessive water loss & electrolyte imbalance: (heat cramps). 154. Result of inadequate fluid replacement; profuse sweating; pale skin; <104 temp; dizziness: (exertional heat exhaustion) 155. Serious life-threatening condition; sudden collapse; >104 temp; minimal sweating; flushed skin: (exertional heatstroke). 156. Severely low body temperature from wind chill and dampness to increase chances: (hypothermia). 157. Involves ears, nose, chin, fingers, toes; occurs with high wind or severe cold; skin appears firm with cold painless areas: (frost nip). 158. Involves only skin and subcutaneous tissue; appears pale, hard cold, and waxy: (superficial frostbite). 159. Indicates frozen skin requiring hospitalization; tissue will become blothchy red, swollen, painful, may become gangrenous: (deep frostbite). 160. Experience when making jump to 7000-8000 ft. elevation; headache, nausea, vomiting, sleep disturbance, dyspnea: (acute mountain sickness). 161. Occurs at 9000-10000 ft. elevation; lungs accumulate fluid in alveolar walls: (altitude pulmonary edema). 162. When an injury occurs at the opposite side of where the impact occurred: (countercoup).