Pain
MSK Anatomy
MSK Assessment
Neuro Anatomy
Neuro Assessment
100
Name one cause of neuropathic pain

DMII, stroke

100

Glenohumeral joint

humerus and scapula

100
How to assess a swollen knee

Bulge sign for a small amount of swelling, Ballottement for a larger size

100

You are using these two parts of the brain now to comprehend what I'm saying (lobe and area)

temporal, Wernicke's

100

IX, X

glossopharyngeal, vagus

Phonation, uvula and palate rise symmetrically

200

Three non verbal cues a pt is in pain

agitation/confusion, vocalizations, muscle tension, facial expression

200

Hip joint

acetabulum and greater trochanter of femur

200

First area to assess if a pt c/o L knee pain

R knee

Head to toe, side to side, above and below

200

The part of the brain that moves the legs

frontal

200

II

Optic.

Snellen

300
General expected duration for acute pain
Sigh.....
300

What is BMD

bone mineral density

300

This is how to grade a patient that can briefly lift a limb against gravity before falling back to the bed

3/5

300

Eyes-in-the-back-of-the-head lobe

occipital

300

Disinhibited, weakness to R face and arm

L frontal

400

Explain the pain transmission steps (3-4 steps)

afferent sensory stimuli (stove, reflex hammer), up to cord, efferent motor response, (pull hand away, knee kick)

400
Knee bone connected to the shin bone

Ligament (patellar ligament)

400

Flex and extend your wrist

Vitruvian man as a point of departure

400

These muscles control ocular movements 

Extraocular muscles

400

XII

Hypoglossal

tongue midline no atrophy or fasciculations

500

This is who decides how much pain a patient is in

the patient

500

The name of the tissue in between the vertebrae

intervertebral discs

Quantity of vertebrae? Why pt's lose height? Curvatures?

500

Demonstrate 1 of 2 tests for wrist pain

Phalen's or Tinel's

500

The part of the brain that coordinates the legs

Cerebellum

500

Sudden onset numbness to R leg

Left parietal

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