Ethics
Anthropometrics
Basic Modalities
Basic Rehab
Cold Injury/Illness
100

This is defined as "the quality of mind and spirit that enables one to face up to ethical challenges firmly and confidently, without flinching or retreating". 

What is moral courage? 

100

Blood pressure is read as this. 

What is systolic/diastolic? 
100
Standard treatment time for this type of cryotherapy is 20-30 minutes

What are ice packs? 

100

This is considered joint motion that occurs because of a muscle contraction. 

What is Active Range of Motion? 

100

This is an abnormally low body temperature. 

What is hypothermia?

200

Violation of law, not true, and core moral values have been violated are three ways to be this. 

 What is wrong? 

200

When taking a patient's resting pulse, this artery is checked.

What is radial? 

200

Contraindications for this modality include PAD and Raynauds phenomenon. 

What is cryotherapy? 

200

These are the ABC's of proprioception.

What is agility, balance, & coordination? 

200

This cold injury can be superficial where the skin appears pale, cold and waxy or deep, where the skin becomes red, swollen, painful, and possible gangrenous requiring hospitalization. 

What is frostbite? 

300

This paradigm is used when fair and equal application of rules are pitted against compassion for an individual. 

What is justice vs. mercy? 

300

When administering this test, the patient should stand 20 feet away. 

What is the Snellen chart? 

300

This is what you inform the patient to expect to feel during cryotherapy. 

What is cold, burning, aching, and numbness? 

300

This is considered movement performed completely by the clinician. 

What is Passive Range of Motion? 

300

To combat this condition, the body compensates through tachycardia and hyperventilation. 

What is altitude sickness? 

400

In athletic training, this was first developed in 1957 by Howard Waite and Pinky Newell as part of the regulations of the profession.

What is code of ethics? 

400

These are two ways to assess temperature, although rectal temperature is the most accurate. 

What is oral and tympanic? 

400

This modality creates vasodilation and elasticity to collagen-rich tissues. 

What is thermotherapy? 

400

This is the awareness of one's body position in space. 

What is proprioception? 

400

At the individual level, this population partially adapts to altitude through increased mitochondria and hemoglobin, along with glycogen conservation. 

What is resident? 

500

When the star player is hurt and the team and coaches are wanting them to play in the championship game in two days, is an example of this ethical paradigm an athletic trainer might face. 

What is individual vs community? 

500

Having the patient shrug their shoulder or duck walk are examples of this during a pre-participation exam. 

What is orthopedic screening? 

500

This is the typical temperature range for a warm whirlpool. 

What is 105-110 degrees F? 

500

This type of strengthening with a fixed speed and accommodating resistance throughout the range of motion. 

What is isokinetic? 

500

This causes an enlarged spleen and could rupture at high altitude. 

What is sickle cell trait reaction? 

M
e
n
u