Development of Neuropsychology
Brain Injuries
Neuropsychological Assessment and Cranial Nerves
Integrative Questions
100

Damage to this brain area results in slow, effortful speech but preserved comprehension.

Broca's area

100

What psychological factor can worsen post-concussion symptoms?  

Post-injury anxiety

100

Which cranial nerves control eye movement?

CN III (oculomotor), IV (trochlear), VI (abducens)

100

A patient has numbness and difficulty moving their lower jaw. Which division of the nervous system and which cranial nerve are affected?

Somatic nervous system

Trigeminal nerve (CNV)

200

This pseudoscience claimed personality traits could be determined by bumps on the skull.

Phrenology

200

A 32-year-old woman experiences fatigue, numbness, muscle spasms, and difficulty walking. MRI shows white-matter scarring. What condition is most likely?

Multiple sclerosis (MS)

200

Which cranial nerve supplies the muscles of mastication?

Trigeminal nerve (CNV)

200

A patient reports progressive memory loss, difficulty forming new memories, and occasional seizures. MRI reveals a slow-growing, well-contained mass in the medial temporal lobe. Which brain structure and type of tumor are most likely involved?

Hippocampus 

Benign tumor

300

What type of aphasia results in fluent but meaningless speech with poor comprehension?

Wernicke's aphasia 

Bonus: What is another name for Wernicke's aphasia?

300

Excess phosphorylated tau disrupts neurons by damaging what intracellular structure?

Microtubules

300

What is the Rinne test?

Place a sounding tuning fork on the patient's mastoid process, then next to their ear and ask which is louder

Bonus: Which position should healthy individuals report as louder? 

300

A patient was hit in the head during a sports game and now has headache, dizziness, and brief confusion, but routine imaging shows no fractures. To rule out any vascular damage, which diagnostic procedure should be performed, and what type of brain injury does the patient have?

Angiogram

Concussion

400

A patient cannot recognize common objects by sight but can identify them by touch. Which stream is affected?

Ventral stream


400

What are the 4 cells that are invaded by HIV?

- Microglia

- Macrophages

- Astrocytes

- Vascular endothelial cells

400

A patient presents with headache, nausea, and diplopia. Imaging is negative. A cerebral angiogram shows no aneurysm. Which next step could help rule out infection or tumor?

Lumbar puncture


400

A patient diagnosed with an HIV infection presents with hearing loss, balance problems, motor and cognitive disturbances. Which cranial nerve is likely affected, and based on the neurological symptoms, what stage of HIV infection is most likely?

Vestibulocochlear nerve (CNVIII)

Advanced HIV

500

What are the steps in Wernicke's model?

1. Sound sensations are enter auditory pathway and travels to the temporal lobes from the ears

2. Sounds are processed into auditory representations and stored in Wernicke's area

3. Auditory images are sent to Broca's area via the arcuate fasciculus 

4. Articulation of auditory images via motor pathway

500

A patient has a slow-growing brain tumor that initially responds to surgery but shows regrowth years later. What tumor grade best fits this pattern?

Grade II

500

 A 55-year-old patient presents with hoarseness, difficulty swallowing, and a uvula that deviates to the left when they say “ahh.” They also have impaired gag reflex on the right side. Which cranial nerve is affected, and what is the likely side of the lesion?

Vagus nerve (CNX)

500

A patient suddenly develops difficulty guiding their hand to grasp a cup, often misreaching despite being able to accurately describe the cup’s shape and color. Imaging reveals a blocked blood vessel supplying the parietal lobe. Which visual processing pathway is likely affected, and what type of brain injury has occurred?

Dorsal stream 

Stroke

M
e
n
u