Basics
Mechanisms
Tissues
ATR
Injury
100
The NATA stands for:
What is the National Athletic Trainers' Association
100
What is trauma?
What is a physical injury or wound sustained in sport and produced by an external or internal force?
100
The 5 tissue stresses are:
What are tension, stretching, compression, shearing, bending?
100
List 3 rules that an athletic training room must have
What is be respectful, wear athletic gear, no food or drink, no cleats, arrive on time, no gum, etc.
100
The injury evaluation acronym is:
What is HOPS? History, Inspection/Observation, Palpation, Special Tests?
200
There are _______ districts in NATA. Hint: Not the same amount of districts as the Hunger Games. Bonus: What would your athletic training district be known for?
What is 10?
200
This is a stretch, rip, tear in the muscle
What is a strain?
200
An abrasion is defined as ____________ while a laceration is defined as ____________
What is the skin is scraped against a rough surface and the layers are scraped away vs. the flesh has been irregularly torn.
200
This is one of the most important aspects of being an athletic trainer:
What is record keeping?
200
When evaluating an injury, you must always compare ____________.
What is bilaterally?
300
The 5 domains of an athletic trainer covers are:
What are: 1. Prevention 2. Emergency Care 3. Evaluation and Diagnosis 4. Therapeutic Intervention 5. Rehabilitation
300
This injury is caused by a force found outside of the body
What is an external force?
300
Bruise
What is contusion?
300
HIPAA stands for:
What is Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act?
300
Under "Special Tests" what are you looking for? Be specific
What is ROM, joint stability, strength? -decreases in ROM, increases in joint laxity, decreased strength
400
These things are a must if you plan to become an athletic trainer:
What is graduate from an accredited college or university, pass the BOC certification exam, and be recognized by the state that you practice in. (CT = licensure, CO = registration).
400
Wasting away of muscle tissue is classified as:
What is atrophy?
400
This connects bone to bone
What is a ligament?
400
The primary function of an athletic trainer is:
What is recognition?
400
The primary goal of an emergency evaluation is:
What is to control the life-threatening conditions first and then to control the non-life threatening conditions? Primary survey -->secondary survey
500
Ice Vs. Heat What are the physiological mechanisms of each? Why would you use each?
What is Ice: decreases local blood flow, edema, slows nerve transmission (decreases pain), use for acute injuries up to 72 hours after injury Heat: increases blood flow, decreases pain, increase muscle relaxation, use for chronic injuries
500
A comminuted fracture is defined as _____________, whereas a blowout fracture is defined as _____________.
What is a fracture with 3 or more bone fragments blowout: wall of orbit in eye
500
This is the point at which two bones articulate. When injury occurs at this site, it can cause ___________. The most common sites of injury are ____________ and __________. Three ways to know if this has happened include ________, _______, ___________.
What is a joint, dislocation, finger and shoulder, pain, deformity, loss of motion?
500
The guidelines for splinting are:
What is you must splint in the position that you find it in, you must splint above and below the injury site?
500
The treatment acronym is:
What is PRICES? protection, rest, ice, compression, elevation, support?