Neuro & Motor Control
Stroke (CVA)
TBI & Cognition
Neurodegenerative Diseases
Spinal Cord Injury
100

This refers to the CNS’s ability to regulate movement.


What is motor control?

100

A stroke affecting one side of the brain impacts this side of the body.

What is the contralateral side?

100

This scale measures level of consciousness after TBI.


What is the Glasgow Coma Scale?

100

This disease is also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease.

What is ALS?

100

Injury at cervical level results in this.

What is tetraplegia or quadraplegia?

200

This concept explains recovery after brain injury.

What is neuroplasticity?

200

Most common artery involved in stroke.

What is the MCA?

200

Best predictor of long-term functional outcome after TBI.

What is post-traumatic amnesia (PTA)?

200

ALS involves damage to these two systems.

What are UMN and LMN?

200

Loss of motor and sensory function at S4–S5 defines this.

What is a complete SCI (AIS A)?

300

UMN lesions typically result in this type of tone

Spasticity / hypertonia

300

This is the most critical recovery window after a stroke.


What is the first 3–6 months?

300

“Wakefulness without awareness” describes this condition.

What is a vegetative state?

300

Most common form of dementia.

What is Alzheimer’s disease?

300

This condition causes sudden high blood pressure and headache in SCI.

What is autonomic dysreflexia?

400

LMN lesions typically result in this.

Flaccidity / decreased tone

400

Patient has fluent speech but it makes no sense.  What type of aphasia?

What is Wernicke’s aphasia?

400

This cognitive scale ranges from Level I–X and guides behavior strategies.

What is Rancho Los Amigos Scale?

400

This disease presents with chorea and cognitive decline.


What is Huntington’s disease?

400

Client gets dizzy when moving upright.  What is this?

What is orthostatic hypotension?

500

Why might MMT NOT be appropriate with severe spasticity?

Movement is not voluntary or selective

500

Why is a top-down approach preferred over bottom-up in stroke rehab?

Focuses on meaningful occupations and avoids getting lost in deficits

500

Why is agitation (Rancho IV) difficult in therapy?

Inconsistent behavior, poor safety awareness, difficulty following directions

500

Why does OT shift from restoration to compensation in degenerative disease?


Because function progressively declines

500

First thing you do if autonomic dysreflexia is suspected?

Sit patient upright and remove noxious stimuli