Motor Impairments
Sensory Impairments
Cognitive Impairments
Stroke: Health Condition
Functional Movement Analysis / Outcome Measures
100

Neurologic weakness due to a stroke stems from a lesion to this type of motor neuron

What is an Upper Motor Neuron?

100

This is the most common form of vision field loss after a stroke

What is a homonymous hemianopsia?

100

A patient demonstrates no arousal or awareness, meaning they are in this level of consciousness / rancho los amigos cognitive level

What is coma / Rancho level I?

100

This artery is the most commonly affected by a stroke and presents with contralateral neurologic weakness UE>LE

What is the MCA?

100

Your patient presents with knee hyperextension during mid-stance. You should test this muscle group for weakness during your Body F&S exam

What are the plantarflexors?

200

This type of hypertonia is velocity dependent

What is spasticity?

200

A patient does not eat the food on the left half of their plate. This is what type of neglect

What is spatial neglect? (also maybe an argument for Sensory neglect)

200

A Glasgow Coma Scale score of 9-12 is indicative of this level of brain injury

What is a moderate brain injury? 

200

This is the appropriate order of going through the ICF framework when performing a neurological evaluation

What is participation restrictions, activity limitations, and Body F+S impairments?
200

Documenting that a sit-stand task took 27 seconds would be part of this aspect of a movement analysis

What is quantitative description?

300

This type of tremor is most often found in Parkinson disease

What is resting tremor?

300

A patient cannot tell the difference between the doorbell and their cell phone ring tone. You recognize this as this type of perceptual deficit

What is an auditory agnosia?

300

You could use this outcome measure to assess cognition in a patient that demonstrates awareness

What is the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA)?

300

These outcome measures could be used to assess the participation restrictions of patients that have had a stroke

What are the Stroke Impact Scale and PSFS?

300

Your patient explains that they sometimes have difficulty walking in the grocery store when they look back and forth between aisles. This outcome measure would be the most appropriate to assess this deficit

What is the Functional Gait Assessment (FGA)?

400

A patient's UEs are in flexion while the LEs demonstrate extension. This would be considered this type of posturing

What is decorticate posture?

400

An example of this condition is a patient uses their R UE to push towards the L side of their body due to a feeling of imbalance after they experience a stroke

What is pusher's syndrome? (bonus: what side of the brain would be affected in this case?)

400

A patient has a difficult time during therapy appointments in a busy gym, leading you to believe they have a deficit with this type of attention

What is selective attention?

400

These 3 conditions determine if a patient is eligible for IV thrombolitics

What is age >18, clinical dx of ischemic CVA causing measurable neurologic deficits, and onset of sxs <4.5 hours before beginning tx
400

This score on the Berg Balance Scale represents the cut-off score for higher fall risk

What is 45/56?

500

When testing hypertonia, you note a slight increase in muscle tone, manifested by a catch, followed by minimal resistance throughout the remainder (less than half) of the ROM. This would result in you assigning of score of this on the Modified Ashworth Scale.

What is a 1+?

500

You ask a patient to blow out some birthday candles and they cannot perform the action, despite having adequate muscle and lung function. You recognize this as this type of impairment

What is Ideomotor apraxia?

500

When testing alertness/orientation, you would ask questions about these different aspects of orientation in this specific order

What is person, place, time, situation?

500

The BE FAST acronym stands for these sxs of a stroke

What is Balance Loss, Eyesight Changes, Face Drooping, Arm Weakness, Speech Difficulty, and Time to call 911?

500

These 2 outcome measures have a component that measures reactive postural adjustments

What is the miniBest and FIST?