Anatomy
Neuroscience & Occupation
Professional Skills
AT & Modalities
Older Adults/Adults
100

The name of the technique of measuring angles, specifically the range of motion (ROM) of human joints.

What is Goniometry?

100

Pain that persists for more than 3 months. (This is known as)

What is Chronic Pain?

100

There are ___ Occupations listed in the OTPF-4 (Answer is a number)

9: ADL, IADL, Health Management, Rest and Sleep, Education, Work, Play, Leisure, Social Participation

100

The level of technology that includes mouthsticks, reachers, and picture boards.

What is Low Tech?

100

The type of memory required to orient, navigate, and recall spatial layouts, landmarks, and routes in familiar environments.

What is Topographical Memory?

200

The anatomical name for the shoulder joint.

What is the Glenohumeral joint?

200

Injury to this structure leads to diagnoses of Parkinson’s Disease, Huntington's disease, and dystonia.

What is the Basal Ganglia?

200

The institution in which Dr. Buford received his degree in Occupational Therapy.

What is the University of Southern California (USC)?

200

This 1965 theory explains how a TENS unit uses a "tingling" sensation to block pain signals at the spinal cord, effectively "shutting the door" before they reach the brain.

What is Gate Control Theory?

200

The name of Dr. Thomas's dog.

Who is Mops?

300

The plane in which shoulder abduction moves.

What is the Coronal/Frontal Plane?
300

Specialized sensory nerve endings that are responsible for transmitting pain signals to the brain.

What are Nociceptors?

300

The model that describes how humans generate and modify their occupations in interaction with the environment. The internal part consists of three subsystems: Volition, Habituation, and Performance.

What is the Model of Human Occupation (MOHO)?

300

The stage of wound healing that involves the synthesis of collagen, granulation tissue, and epithelization.

What is the Proliferative Phase?

300

The personality disorder cluster that includes Antisocial, Borderline, Histrionic, and Narcissistic Personality Disorders.

What is Cluster B?

400

A provocative test where a patient has an enclosed fist with a supinated forearm, and the clinician provides resistance against wrist flexion. This is a test for Medial Epicondylitis.

What is Reverse Cozen's Test?

400

The name of Dr. Seber's daughter.

Who is Millie?

400

The blood vessel used when taking manual blood pressure.

What is the Brachial Artery?

400

The institution in which Professor Rogers received his degree in Occupational Therapy.

What is West Coast University?

400

This pelvic posture is the result of tight hamstrings and abdominal muscles, and weak ilipsoas and erector spinae muscles.

What is a Posterior Pelvic Tilt?

500

The location/bone in Dr. G's pinkie (Digit 5) that was fractured, as stated in her email.

What is her distal phalanx?

500

An excess of this neurotransmitter may lead to symptoms of hypervigilance, poor concentration, and fatigue.

What is Norepinephrine?

500

Professional advocates in government who communicate with legislators to influence public policies in the Occupational Therapy practice.

What is a lobbyist?

500

An indirect selection technique for scanning, where the user activates the control interface once for each item to advance through choices in the selection set.

What is Step Scanning?

500

The first level of spinal cord injury that is appropriate to educate patients with strategies involving tenodesis.

What is a C6 injury?

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