History
Dx
T&M
Manual Therapy
Therex
100

What is the main reason behind the triage portion of the initial examination?

What is deciding whether the pt. is appropriate for PT

100

The complete severance of a nerve with loss of all function

what is neurotmesis  

100

This is the passive accessory motion or “glide”

What is arthokinematics

100

Manual Therapy can be utilize to treat several conditions through various methods. Name the areas treated and techniques used.

What are joint, soft tissue, and nerve? What are mobilization, manipulation, muscle energy, dry needling, and nerve gliding?

100

Definition of Isokinetic Movement

Exercise with constant velocity  

200

There are many flags that can be used for classification of pts. What flag symbolizes positive factors, such as positive pt. perspective?

What is a pink flag

200

A pain that is the amplification of nerual signaling within the CNS resulting in hypersensitivity

What is central Sensitization pain

200

The side should be tested first

What is the uninvolved side

200

The APTA Guide to PT Practice defined joint mobilization/manipulation as?

A continuum of skilled passive movements to the joints and/or related soft tissues applied at varying speeds & amplitudes, including HVLA (high-velocity, low-amplitude) movement

200

Exercises for patients with hypermobility?  

Motor Control/Stability/Strength Exercises

300

This chart shows how bio-psycho-social aspects work together and alter the pain a person feels.        

What is the Neuromatrix Theory of Pain

300

A lesion or dysfunction in a peripheral nerve, dorsal root ganglion, or spinal nerve root arising from trauma, compression, inflammation, or ischemia

What is peripheral neuropathic pain 

300

Joint surfaces are maximally congruent, ligaments are taut, and joint is maximally stable

What is a closed-packed position.

300

Manual Therapy is indicated based on what evaluation findings?

What is a local neuromuscular disorder with decreased joint PAM and concordant pain?

300

Neuroplasticity

Use it or Lose it, Use it and Improve it!

400

A pt. explains to you when she shampoos her hair, her shoulder pain becomes sharp, and the pain lasts for upwards of an hour afterwards. What part of SINSS is she describing?

What is irritability

400

neuropraxia and its recovery time 

What is the transient physiological block caused by ischemia from pressure or stretching of a nerve recovery in minutes to days, usually complete. 

400

A negative result gives you more info than a positive result

What is a sensitive test

400

State the effects of Manual Therapy and what can be done to enhance the effects?  

 What are the short-term effects of decrease pain, decrease muscle tone, increase motion, and improved sensorimotor integration & motor control? What is combining manual therapy with therapeutic exercise?

400

Goal of Exercise Prescription in Chronic Phase

Return to Function

500

What does SINSS stand for, and which category is most important for developing a differential DX?

What is Severity, Irritability, Nature, Stage, & Stability; nature = most important for differential DX

500

4 types of bone fractures

what are: greenstick, spiral, comminuted, transverse 

500

This tests contractile, non-contractile, and neural tissue of a joint

What is AROM

500

This theoretical mechanism of manual therapy operates through endogenous inhibition of pain, decrease inflammatory mediators, decreased dorsal horn sensitization, and alter sensory processing.

 What is neurophysiological?

500

Progression from Static Balance

Balance on uneven surfaces, closing eyes, adding a task

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