Anatomy
Strokes
Seizures
PNS
Neuro- degenerative
100

These are the major components of the diencephalon

What is Thalamus, Hypothalamus, Corpus Callosum, Pituitary Gland, and Pineal Gland

100

This is what CVA stands for 

What is cerebrovascular accident

100

This is the difference between a primary and secondary seizure

What is known (secondary) vs unknown cause (primary)

100
The part of peripheral nervous system we voluntarily control

What is somatic nervous system

100

This disease is characterized by tremors, rigidity, and bradykinesia

What is Parkinson Disease

200

This lobe controls personality, emotions, attention, judgement, and speech

What is the Frontal Lobe

200

The biggest modifiable risk factor for all types of strokes

What is Hypertension

200

These are the types of focal seizures

What is simple partial, complex partial, and secondary generalized partial

200

An area of skin innervated by a specific spinal nerve

What is dermatome

200

The people with the highest incidence of Multiple Sclerosis 

What is caucasian women who are 20-40 years old

300

These cells maintain the integrity of the blood brain barrier and keep an optimal synaptic environment 

What is Astrocytes

300
This stroke occurs over a longer period of time from chronic hypertension that narrows blood vessels leading to a lack of blood flow

What is Lacunar Infarct

300

The complex seizure that is characterized by brief jerks of muscles or groups of muscles

What is myoclonic

300

This pathway crosses over immediately after entering the spinal cord

What is spinothalamic tract

300

The last resort treatment for Multiple Sclerosis

What is the cytotoxic drug Mitoxantrone (Novantrone)

400

These are the primary excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitters in the CNS

What is Glutamate and GABA

400

This complication can occur after a subarachnoid hemorrhagic stroke

What is Vasospasm

400

The drug of choice for a seizure that is too long and won't stop 

What is IV Valium

400

This complication occurs with a spinal cord injury T6 and above

What is autonomic dysreflexia

400

The degenerative disease that only effects motor neurons and leads to asymmetrical paresis

What is Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS)

500

These receptors are slower and consist of a intracellular cascade

What is Metabotropic Receptors

500

An embolic stroke can be caused by

What is a mural thrombi, valve vegetation, hypertension, carotid artery plaques, and atrial fibrillation

500

This seizure medication is the first of its class and is a potassium channel opener

What is Ezogabine (Potiga)

500

Commonly referred to as the suicide disease, this disorder occurs in CN V when there is excessive neuronal firing

What is Trigeminal Neuralgia

500

An autosomal dominant disorder that causes dementia and hyperkinesis due to relative excess dopamine

What is Huntington's Disease