Aphasia
Cog-Comm Disorders
Motor Speech Disorders
Voice Disorders
Dysphagia
100

Which type of aphasia is this? - able to comprehend and repeat, but is nonfluent

Transcortical Motor Aphasia*

100

This was designed as a rapid screening instrument for mild cognitive dysfunction. It assesses different cognitive domains: attention and concentration, executive functions, memory, language, visuoconstructional skills, conceptual thinking, calculations, and orientation

Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MOCA)

100

What is something in common with all dysarthria types?

Slurred speech

100

What is the term for loss of voice?

Aphonia

100

Which two vital signs are objectively measured by a pulse oximeter?

Heart Rate and Oxygen Saturation (SpO2)*

200

What do you call the score you get from administration of WAB-R that includes reading and writing, but excludes apraxia scores?

Language Quotient*

200

What are the two treatment approaches in cog-comm therapy?

Process-oriented, task-based

200

Which dysarthria type is characterized by having fasciculations?

Flaccid dysarthria (LMN)*

200

What do you call the condition with the presence of a deep vocal fold scar?

Sulcus Vocalis

200

During 4-point palpation, where do you place your middle finger?

Hyoid bone*

300

What do you call the nonverbal treatment approach that trains individuals to use hand gestures to indicate visually absent items?

Visual Action Therapy

300

What to you call the treatment technique that uses procedural memory to help people recall info over longer intervals of time?

Spaced Retrieval Training

300

Lesions in the basal ganglia control circuit would lead to which two possible dysarthria types?

Hyperkinetic and Hypokinetic*

300

What are the three major classifications of voice disorders?

Functional, Neurological, Organic*

300

Name the positioning technique which may bring the tongue base closer to the posterior pharyngeal wall, narrow the opening to the airway, and widen the vallecular space.

Chin - Tuck

400

Your client is not be able to do verbal naming but can write the name down. Which part of the PALPA model is affected?

Phonological output lexicon*

400

What skill do you target when you give a paragraph reading task, then ask questions about the client's capacity to adopt the perspective of a story character?

Theory of Mind

400

It is a method for practicing movement gestures for speech production that involves imitation and emphasizes multiple sensory models (e.g., auditory, visual, tactile). Treatment follows a "listen to me, watch me, do what I do" sequence, in which the individual hears and sees how the clinician produces a targeted sound sequence or word/phrase and then imitates

Integral stimulation*

400

What voice therapy technique designed to reduce laryngeal tension/hyperfunction and increase air flow wherein the individual begins with an easy and breathy vocal quality and builds to normal voicing without decreasing airflow?

Confidential Voice Therapy

400

Which swallowing maneuver is designed to close the vocal folds by voluntarily holding one's breath before and during swallow in order to protect the airway?

Supgraglottic Swallow

500

What are the 5 patterns of auditory deficit?

Slow rise time, Noise build up, Retention deficit, Information capacity deficit, Intermittent auditory perception

500

If you have a patient with neglect due to RHD, describe the scenarios wherein you will place objects either on the left of right

Left - facilitate, Right - compensate*

500

Explain the difference between apraxia and dysarthria in terms of management

...

500

What would be the difference in voice quality for a person with small VF nodules vs a person with a large VF nodule?

Small = hoarseness, Large = breathiness

500

Explain why a person might have silent aspiration

Decreased sensation and absent reflexive cough

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