DMII, stroke
Glenohumeral joint
humerus and scapula
Bulge sign for a small amount of swelling, Ballottement for a larger size
You are using these two parts of the brain now to comprehend what I'm saying (lobe and area)
temporal, Wernicke's
IX, X
glossopharyngeal, vagus
Phonation, uvula and palate rise symmetrically
Three non verbal cues a pt is in pain
agitation/confusion, vocalizations, muscle tension, facial expression
Hip joint
acetabulum and greater trochanter of femur
First area to assess if a pt c/o L knee pain
R knee
Head to toe, side to side, above and below
The part of the brain that moves the legs
frontal
II
Snellen
What is BMD
bone mineral density
This is how to grade a patient that can briefly lift a limb against gravity before falling back to the bed
3/5
Eyes-in-the-back-of-the-head lobe
occipital
Disinhibited, weakness to R face and arm
L frontal
Explain the pain transmission steps (3-4 steps)
afferent sensory stimuli (stove, reflex hammer), up to cord, efferent motor response, (pull hand away, knee kick)
Ligament (patellar ligament)
Flex and extend your wrist
Vitruvian man as a point of departure
These muscles control ocular movements
Extraocular muscles
XII
Hypoglossal
tongue midline no atrophy or fasciculations
This is who decides how much pain a patient is in
the patient
The name of the tissue in between the vertebrae
intervertebral discs
Quantity of vertebrae? Why pt's lose height? Curvatures?
Demonstrate 1 of 2 tests for wrist pain
Phalen's or Tinel's
The part of the brain that coordinates the legs
Cerebellum
Sudden onset numbness to R leg
Left parietal