A) Injuries to one spinal nerve, only.
B) Injuries to a single spinal nerve, plexus or peripheral nerve trunk.
C) Injuries, which are usually systemic.
D) A.K.A ‘Mono’ or ‘the kissing disease’ caused by the Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV).
A) Hypertonicity, muscle spasm, compression, functional loss
B) Ischemia, hypoxia, cell injury, tissue damage, necrosis, functional loss, compression
C) Compression, ischemia, hypoxia, cell injury, tissue damage, necrosis, functional loss
D) Inflammation, hypoxia, cell injury, vasoconstriction, compression
a) Erb’s Palsy
b) Bell’s Palsy
c) Guillian-Barre Syndrome
d) Klumpke’s Paralysis
a) dislocation of GH joint
b) Colle's fracture
c) Pott's fracture
d) surgery
a) ulnar n.
b) radial n.
c) median n.
d) musculocutaneous n.
A) Injury to a nerve plexus, and is usually unilateral.
B) Injuries to a single spinal nerve, plexus or peripheral nerve trunk.
C) Injury to multiple nerves and is usually systemic.
D) Injury to multiple nerves and is usually local.
A) Neuritis
B) Neuropathy
C) Causalgia
D) Neuralgia
a) unable to close eye
b) facial distortion
c) hyperacusis (acute hearing)
d) increased blinking reflex
a) forearm pronation, wrist flexion, elbow flexion
b) forearm supination, wrist extension, elbow extension
c) finger and thumb flexion, wrist flexion, elbow flex ion
d) forearm pronation, wrist abduction, elbow flexion
a) tendons of flexor digitorum profundus and superficialis, and flexor pollicis longus
b) tendons of flexor carpi radialis and palmaris longus
c) tendons of flexor pollicis longus, flexor carpi radialis and ulnaris
d) tendons of extensor digitorum and extensor pollicis longus
A) Can occur in both CNS and PNS.
B) Describes when a nerve fiber is cut or crushed and there is degenerative changes to the axon, distal to injury site.
C) With crush injuries there is a better repair rate than with complete transection of the nerve.
D) The closer the injury site is to the cell body = better repair.
a) Causalgia
b) Neurasthenia
c) Hyperacusis
d) Neuritis
a) Klumpke’s Paralysis “Claw hand”
b) Erb’s Palsy “Waiter’s tip”
c) Median nerve deformity “Ape hand”
d) Ulnar nerve deformity “Bishop’s hand”
a) C5-C6
b) C8-T1
c) CN 7
d) C5-T1
a) 5
b) 3
c) 9
d) 12
4 tendons from flexor digitorum superficialis, 4 tendons of flexor digitorum profundus, and 1 tendon of flexor pollicis longus
A) Injury to a cranial nerve.
B) Injury to a nerve plexus.
C) Wallerian degeneration.
D) A nerve root injury.
A) Anterior scalene syndrome
B) Periostalgia (soleus syndrome)
C) Pectoralis minor syndrome
D) Costoclavicular syndrome
a) Erb's Palsy
b) Bell's Palsy
c) Klumpke's Paralysis
d) Thoracic Outlet Syndrome
Nerve root injury to C8-T1
a) C1-C4
b) C5-C6
c) C5-T1
d) C8-T1
a) demyelination of ventral spinal roots
b) demyelination of oligodendrocytes
c) demyelination of dorsal spinal roots
d) Wallerian degeneration
A) Sequestration, Extrusion, Protrusion, Prolapse
B) Protrusion, Extrusion, Prolapse, Sequestration
C) Protrusion, Prolapse, Extrusion, Sequestration
D) Prolapse, Protrusion, Sequestration, Extrusion
A) External pressure
B) Internal pressure
C) Metabolic and immune imbalances
D) Hypotonicity
a) hyperacusis
b) miosis
c) ptosis
d) anhydrosis
a) C5-T1
b) C8-T1
c) C5-C7
d) C5-C6
a) hemiplegia
b) symmetric flaccid paralysis
c) symmetric spastic paralysis
d) quadriplegia