Pick
One
Of
The
Following
100

Addresses the ability to hold the position of an individual limb or limb segment 

Fixation or limb holding 

100

Order of coordination testing 

1. unilateral tasks 

2. bilateral symmetrical tasks 

3. bilateral asymmetrical tasks 

4. multi limb tasks 

100

Finger to nose; finger to therapists finger; finger to finger; alternate nose to finger; finger opposition; mass grasp; pronation/supination; rebound test are all examples of what

Coordination testing 

100

The ability to control spontaneous sway in order to sit upright (static) 

Steady state 

100

Response to external forces acting on the body 

Reactive postural control 

200

Involves movement control achieved by synergistic muscle groups acting together 

Movement composition 

200

Which part of the brain is affected if s/s of: dysdiadochokinesia, dysmetria, dyssynergia, asyneria, gait ataxia 

Cerebellum 

200

Which part of the brain is affected if s/s of: gait disturbances, dysmetria 

DCML 

200

Which part of the brain is affected if s/s of: akinesia, athestosis, chorea 

Basal ganglia 

200

Ability to reverse movement between opposing muscle groups 

Reciprocal motion 

300

Decreased strength; decreased ROM; slowed reaction time; postural changes are related to what 

Age related changes 

300

4 things we are looking at in coordination tests 

1. reciprocal motion

2. movement composition 

3. movement accuracy 

4. fixation or limb holding 

300

Which motor category: posture, balance, extremity movements

ex: walk, run, stairs, working out, swimming 

Gross motor 

300

Which type of motor: skillful, controlled manipulation 

ex: writing, typing 

Fine motor 

300

The ability to gauge or judge distance and speed of voluntary movement 

Movement accuracy 

400

Anticipation of internally generated, destabilizing forces imposed on the bodys own movement 

Proactive (anticipatory) postural control

400

Balance with a secondary task (motor or cognitive) 

Dual task control 

400

Prevent a fall after the COM moves irreparably beyond the LOS and prevent injury by one or more extremities reaching out to prop on the surface or reset/expand the BOS in the direction of the disturbance to avert a fall. 

Protective reactions 

400

Orient the head in space and the body in relation to the head and support surface 

Righting reaction 

400

Allows the individual to modify postural responses to changing tasks and environmental demands 

Adaptive postural control 

500

Sophisticated postural responses that occur in response to substantial displacement of the COM 

Equilibrium/balance reactions 

500

Which sensory strategy is most closely associated with DCML? 

Romberg 

500

What are the 3 sensory strategies? 

1. Romberg 

2. Sharpened romberg 

3. Clinical test of sensory integration and balance (CTSIB)

500

Balance: self reported measures 

1. activities: specific balance orientation scale (ABC's) 

2. Tinetti fall efficacy scale 

500

What is the cut off for TUG test? 

13.5 seconds