What is the yield point in tissue?
The point where the tissue is no longer elastic.
Attaches muscle to bone.
Which is the chronic condition- neuropraxia or neuritis?
neuritis
What is staleness
Training too hard and long without proper rest; emotional problem stemming from daily worries
When overtraining is recognized, activity intensity should be decreased for ______ days
3-5 days
WHat are the 5 types of stresses?
compression, tension, torsion, bending, shearing
THe overstretching of a muscle is called what?
strain
overstretching of a ligament with mild separation of the ligament fibers is classified as what grade?
Grade 1
What does the biopsychological Model response include?
physical (biological), psychological and social (environmental)
What is Sudden Exercise Abstinence Syndrome (SEAS)?
condition where individuals who regularly engage in high-intensity or consistent physical activity experience negative physical and mental health effects after abruptly stopping their routine
A contusion is classified as an acute injury due to what type of force?
compression
Which grade of strain is a complete rupture of the tendon or muscle?
grade 3
You should always reduce a dislocation immediately. T/F
False
What is the Kubler-Ross Model?
(often utilized for death and dying, but can also pertain to injuries)1. denial 2. anger 3. bargaining 4. depression 5. acceptance
What are SMART goals?
Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound
Tendonitis is a tension injury and is classified as what kind of injury (acute, overuse)
overuse
What is crepitus?
crackling feeling or sound
What type of fracture is found in the young when bones are not completely ossified?
greenstick
What is thought stopping?
Stopping the undesired by a command word or noise and insert a positive statement
In cases of catastrophic injury, you should always do what as a part of the rehab process?
arrange for counseling
Which stress are loads caused by twisting in opposite directions from opposite ends of the structure?
torsion (think twisting)
What is myositis ossificans? How do you prevent it?
calcium deposits (bone) in the injured musculature caused by repeated blows to a contusion. Prevent by protecting the area until healed.
What is the mneumonic for the types of epiphyseal fractures?

Syndrome related to physical and emotional exhaustion that leads to a negative self-concept, negative job or sport attitude, and a loss of concern for the feelings of others is called what?
burnout
Jacobson's Progressive Relaxation is what?
a method where you tense each muscle group for 5-7 seconds, then relaxes for 20-30 seconds
Injury occurs prior to the yield point of tissue. T/F
False
What is DOMS?
delayed-onset muscle soreness
What is the injury to a ligament called?
sprain
Risk-Takers, Tender-Minded, Over-Protective, Easily-Distracted are athletes that are
prone to injury
What is Albert Ellis Rational Emotive Therapy?
Refuting Irrational Thoughts - actual events do not create emotions, rather self-talk after the event does
What is creep?
The time before tissue failure and after the yield point where deformation and plastic changes to the tissue occurs.
A tendon is double the strength of the muscle it serves. T/F
True
A musculoskeletal injury to a child should always be considered to involve a possible epiphyseal condition. T/F
True
What is PTSD?
post-traumatic stress disorder
____% of young adults suffer from panic attacks
30