Bones/Landmarks
Fracture Types
Movements
Tissue Basics
Random
100

Name the four bones that comprise the knee joint.

Femur

Tibia

Fibula

Patella

100

What is the name for a fracture that occurs as a result of repetitive force being placed on the bone? 

Stress Fracture

100

Demonstrate radial deviation.

Anatomical Position - Wrist Abducts

100

Name the three phases of soft tissue healing.

Stage 1 - Acute - Inflammatory

Stage 2 - Proliferation and Repair

Stage 3 - Remodeling

100

Why are puncture wounds more likely to become infected?

Bacteria is introduced deep into the tissue by the injury object. 

200

Name the three bones that make up each side of the "pelvis" 

Ilium

Ischium

Pubis

200

What is the name for a fracture that results in a diagonal line across the bone?

Oblique Fracture

200

Demonstrate opposition of the thumb.

Anatomical position - Thumb touches the distal surface of each finger.

200

Describe the difference between an acute injury and a chronic injury. Give one example of each type. 

Acute - Sudden, unexpected - Ankle Sprain

Chronic - Repetitive force on the tissue - Shin splints

200

What are the three functions of the skeletal system?

1.) Protect internal organs

2.) Stable surface for muscles to attach to facilitate movement. 

3.) Metabolically active - Produce red blood cells and store minerals. 

300

Name each section of the spine and the number of vertebrae in each section.

Cervical - 7

Thoracic - 12

Lumbar - 5

Sacrum/Sacral - 5

Coccyx/Coccygeal - 4

300

What is the name for a fracture that occurs when a bone fractures at one side, but only bends at the other side?

Greenstick Fracture

300
Demonstrate shoulder flexion with elbow flexion and wrist extension.

Looks like a server carrying a tray.

300

Describe the function of the phagocytes during soft tissue healing. 

"eat" the dead or damaged tissue.

300

What is rarest blood type in humans?

AB negative - Only 1% of the population

400

Name a landmark on at least four different bones. 

Femur - head, neck, greater trochanter, lesser trochanter, medial epicondyle, lateral epicondyle, medial condyle, lateral condyle

Tibia - tibial tuberosity, tibial plateau, medial malleolus

Fibula - head, lateral malleolus

Scapula - Spine, medial border, lateral border

Humerus - Head, greater tubercle, lesser tubercle

400

What is the name of the fracture that results in the bone being crushed into several smaller pieces?

Comminuted Fracture 
400

Demonstrate lateral rotation of the head with shoulder abduction to 90 degrees and elbow flexion to 90 degrees.

Looks like flexing the biceps. 

400

What does the suffix, "itis" mean? Give two examples of "itis" injuries.

Tendonitis - inflammation of the tendon

Bursitis - inflammation of the bursa

Myositis - inflammation of the muscle tissue. 



400
What is name of the bone that supports the tongue?

The Hyoid bone.

500

Name the first two cervical vertebrae? Name and demonstrate each action at this joint.

C1 - Atlas

C2 - Axis

Actions: Flexion, Extension, Lateral Flexion/Abduction, Medial Flexion/Adduction, Lateral Rotation/External Rotation, Medial Rotation/Internal Rotation

500
Name and describe the two bone cells that are responsible for "breakdown" and "repair" of damaged bone tissue?

Osteoclast - break down the damaged bone, "eat" the debris. 

Osteoblast - repair the bone and bring in new material to form additional layers. 

500

Demonstrate internal rotation of the hips bilaterally and shoulder extension bilaterally.

Then, move to shoulder flexion and external rotation. 

Looks like a zombie.

500

What is the function of leukocytes in the body?

White blood cells that detect damaged or infected tissue. 

500

When you lose weight, where does it all go? How is it expelled from the body?

Breathing and Heat.