Stroke Basics
Types of Stroke
Stroke motor recovery
SLP
Medical Management Problems
100
This is the most important risk factor for stroke.
What is age?
100
This stroke syndrome is associate with Horner's syndrome, decreased pain and temperature on ipsilateral face and cerebellar signs.
What is Wallenburg syndrome?
100
These people were the founders of proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation.
Who were Knott and Voss?
100
These are the three phases of swallowing.
What are oral, pharyngeal and esophageal?
100
This is the best line of antidepressants for post-stroke depression.
What are SSRIs?
200
This type of stroke most often occurs during waking hours and is associated with atrial fibrillation.
What is an embolic stroke?
200
This is the arterial location of occlusion for someone suffering from locked-in syndrome.
What is the basilar artery?
200
This is also known as shoulder-hand syndrome.
What is RSD or CRPS type I?
200
This is the phase of swallowing where aspiration is most likely to happen.
What is pharyngeal phase?
200
This test is best used to diagnose bicipital tendonitis.
What is the Yergason test?
300
This type of infarct most often causes a pure motor or pure sensory syndrome.
What is a lacunar infarct?
300
This type of stroke is associated with Berry aneurysms.
What is subarachnoid hemorrhage?
300
This person developed a highly detailed report describing the pattern of motor recovery following a stroke in 1951.
Who was Twitchell?
300
This is a nonfluent aphasia with intact comprehension and no repitition.
What is Broca's aphasia?
300
This is the minimum age for TPA.
What is 18?
400
This is the most important modifiable risk factor for stroke.
What is hypertension?
400
This is the location for a pure sensory stroke.
What is the thalamus?
400
This is the gold standard for diagnosis of RSD.
What is a bone scan?
400
The incomplete closure of this causes nasal speech.
What is the soft palate?
400
This medication reduces vasospasm following SAH.
What is Nimodipine?
500
This type of stroke most often occurs during sleep and may have a "stuttering" or intermittent progression of deficits.
What is a thrombotic infarct?
500
This syndrome is associated with ipsilateral CNIII palsy and contralateral hemiplegia.
What is Weber's syndrome?
500
This method uses primitive patterns in training to attempt to improve motor control through central facilitation.
What is the Brunstrom approach?
500
This aphasia has fluent speech with alexia and agraphia.
What is Wernickes?
500
This is the first line agent for treating post-stroke seizures.
What are benzodiazepines?
M
e
n
u