Cervical Pain
Thoracolumbar
Pain
Upper Extremity
Lower Extremity
Miscellaneous
100

This provocative test combines neck extension, lateral rotation, and axial compression to reproduce radicular arm pain

What is Spurling's test?

100

This test raises the straightened leg with the patient supine, reproducing radicular pain between 30–70°

What is the straight leg raise test?

100

This condition  shows progressive loss of both active AND passive range of motion in the shoulder

What is adhesive capsulitis?

100

This test combines valgus/varus stress with knee flexion/extension and rotation to detect a meniscal tear

What is McMurray's test?

100

This opioid is a partial μ-opioid receptor agonist and κ-opioid receptor antagonist with a ceiling effect on respiratory depression, making it a preferred option for many patients with opioid use disorder and chronic pain.

What is Buprenorphine?


Buprenorphine has high receptor affinity, partial agonist activity at the μ-opioid receptor, and a lower risk of respiratory depression compared with full agonists.

200

This sign — an electric-shock sensation down the spine with neck flexion — suggests cervical cord pathology

What is Lhermitte's sign?

200

This nerve root is most often affected in lumbar disc herniation, causing weak great toe extension

What is L5?

200

This test has the patient make a fist over the thumb while the wrist is ulnarly deviated, for De Quervain's

What is Finkelstein's test?

200

This test pulls the tibia forward with the knee flexed 90° to check ACL integrity

What is the anterior drawer test?

200

Cervical nerve roots exit _____ the corresponding vertebral body. Thoracic and lumbar nerve roots exit _____ the corresponding vertebral body



Above and below

CATLB

300

This nerve root deficit causes weak elbow flexion and a diminished biceps reflex

What is C6 radiculopathy?

300

This pars interarticularis defect is common in adolescent athletes, especially gymnasts and football linemen

What is spondylolysis?

300

This test has the patient resist downward pressure in the "empty can" position to isolate the supraspinatus

What is the empty can (Jobe) test

300

This compressive neuropathy causes burning/numbness over the anterolateral thigh without motor loss

What is meralgia paresthetica?

300

This receptor system is believed to play the central role in opioid-induced hyperalgesia and is the pharmacologic target responsible for methadone's and ketamine's unique utility in this condition.

What is the NMDA receptor?


Central sensitization mediated by NMDA receptor activation contributes to opioid-induced hyperalgesia, making NMDA antagonists useful adjuncts in select patients.

400

This compressive syndrome of the brachial plexus/subclavian vessels is provoked by the Roos or Adson maneuver

What is thoracic outlet syndrome?

400

This surgical emergency presents with saddle anesthesia plus bowel/bladder dysfunction

What is cauda equina syndrome?

400

This pathologic process is responsible for Kienböck disease

Avascular necrosis (osteonecrosis) of the lunate

400

This side-lying test extends and adducts the hip to assess IT band tightness

What is Ober's test?

400

Identify the peripheral sensory fiber type for each description:

1) Myelinated, medium velocity, transmits sharp pain, light touch and temperature

2) Unmyelinated, slow velocity, transmits dull/achy pain and temperature

3) Myelinated, fast velocity, transmits touch, pressure, vibration, proprioception 

1) A-delta

2) C

3) A-beta

500

This upper motor neuron sign — involuntary finger flexion/extension when tapping the middle finger — indicates cervical myelopathy

What is Hoffmann's sign?

500

This test flexes, abducts, and externally rotates the hip to stress the SI joint or hip itself

What is the FABER/Patrick's test?

500

This region of the supraspinatus tendon, located roughly 1 cm from its humeral insertion, has a relatively poor blood supply — making it especially prone to degeneration and tearing, and a key factor in why chronic impingement progresses to rotator cuff failure. 

What is the critical zone (of hypovascularity)?

500

This condition causes heel pain that's worst with the first steps in the morning

What is plantar fasciitis?

500

This steroid minimizes the risk of embolic spinal cord infarction if inadvertent intra-arterial injection occurs.

Dexamethasone

The major concern during cervical TESI is injection into a radicular or vertebral artery. Particulate corticosteroids contain crystals that can aggregate and embolize small arteries supplying the spinal cord or brainstem, potentially causing catastrophic neurologic injury. Dexamethasone has the lowest risk of embolic vascular occlusion because it is non-particulate.