neurological exam
neuroplasticity
SLP tx principles
SLP dx principles
swallowing
100

The one who performs a neurological exam.

Who is a neurologist?

100

The principal principle of neuroplasticity

What is "structure alters function and function alters structure"?  Or "Use it or lose it"?

100

This is a phonemic cue for the word "spaghetti".

What is /s/?

100

These are some ways to prepare for an assessment in a medical setting.

What are reading available medical records, selecting tests, reading the doctor's orders, and preparing to reduce distractions and make them comfortable?

100

In this phase, chewing happens.

What is the oral preparatory phase?

200

The one who may benefit from interpreting the neurological exam.

Who is an SLP or audiologist?

200

This principle says something about old dogs and new tricks.

What is "age matters"?

200

This is a semantic cue for "computer"

What is "electronic"? etc.

200

These are reasons for performing an assessment.

What are "gather information," "hypothesize, test, and make a diagnosis," "make a prognosis," and "plan for therapy if indicated"?

200

In this phase, the bolus is transferred from the oral cavity to the pharynx.

What is the oral transport phase?

300

Damage to this cranial nerve might lead to drooling.

What is CN VII (the facial)?

300

This principle implies exercise or neuromodulary approaches can impact neuroplasticity.

What is transference?

300

This is a characteristic of a word having to do with how it is processed in the mind.

What is a psycholinguistic variable?

300

These are ways to help someone be more comfortable during an assessment session.

What are giving them a chair, telling them who you are, asking them questions, avoiding elderspeak, tell them what you are doing and how long it will take, include family members if the patient desires?

300

This structure gets smaller in diameter during the pharyngeal transport phase.

What is the oropharynx?

400

Damage to this cranial nerve could cause difficulty saying your /l/ /r/ /t/ and /d/ sounds.

What is CN XII (hypoglossal)?

400

This principle states that you need to practice something to get better at it (i.e., you can't get better at it by practicing something else).

What is specificity?

400

True or false: negative feedback is never okay.

What is false?

400

This technique involves holding your tongue between your teeth and swallowing to strengthen your tongue base.

What is the Masako?

500

Damage to this cranial nerve would leave your jaw hanging open.

What is CN V (the trigeminal)?

500

This is the technical term for a hint that an SLP gives to help someone perform a certain behavior.

What is a cue?

500

This is the reason assessment should ideally occur regularly throughout the treatment process.

What is "to account for individual variability"?

500

This phase involves peristalsis.

What is the esophageal transport phase?

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