Neuroplasticity + Theories/Models
Stroke pt 1
Stroke pt 2
Treatment
stupid lil things i forget
100

Complete regaining of identical functions that were lost or impaired after brain damage is known as this

What is spontaneous recovery?

100

This is what BEFAST stands for

What is: balance, eyes, face, arm, speech, and time?

100

If a pt has expressive aphasia, contralateral homonymous hemianopsia, and contralateral hemiplegia w/ UE more involved, blood supply to this artery is impaired

What is middle cerebral (MCA)?

100

A pt may be given an orthotic that promotes DF in order to encourage ______ of the knee

What is flexion?

100

Clonus, hyperreflexia, and hypertonia are associated w/ ______ motor neuron lesions

What is upper?

**LMN lesions associated w/ atrophy, hyporeflexia, and hypotonia

200

Reduced function of a region of the brain due to a lesion as a remote site which normally supplies background excitation is known as this

What is diaschisis?

200

___________ in the UE and ___________ in the LE are the two last movements out of synergy to return in Stage 6 of recovery

What is finger extension and eversion?

200

For the NIHSS, the _______ (larger/smaller) the score, the worse the severity of stroke

What is larger?

**scale is 0-42

200

These are reasons why bed mobility/positioning is important (I listed 6)

What are:

-increase comfort

-prevent skin breakdown

-prevent injury/trauma

-prevent or minimize contractures

-promote natural alignment

-promote functional movement

200

With a central CN VII injury, you would see weakness on the _________ side and it affects the ________ portion of the face

What is contralateral and lower?

**Peripheral VII shows weakness on the ipsilateral side and affects both the upper and lower face

300

This traditional model focused on inhibition of reflexes and assumed higher centers of the brain would resume control

What is the hierarchical model?

300

This is the more important forecaster of stroke

What is a TIA?

**risk of stroke within 90 days is >10%

300

Neurological recovery is generally complete within _________ post stroke

What is 3 months?

**but we may see continued functional improvements for years

300

A ground reaction force AFO (GRAFO) would be good for this pattern of gait

What is crouch gait?

300

If you ask a pt to protude their tongue and it deviates to one side, this is their _______ (weak/strong) side

What is weak?

400

This type of collateral sprouting leads to dysfunction as nerve fibers start sprouting fast, the fibers grow short, and they are not chemically specific

What is heterotypic collateral sprouting?

400

These are the three domains that the AM-PAC measures

What are: basic mobility, daily activity, and applied cognitive?

400

At this stage of recovery we start to see some movement out of synergy

What is Stage 4?

*for UE: hand behind sacrum, shoulder flexion w/ elbow extension, and pro/sup w/ elbow flexed to 90

*for LE: sitting w/ knee flexion beyond 90, DF of ankle w/ heel on the floor, and initiation of bridging motion in hooklying

400

These are interventions for Pusher Syndrome (I listed 4)

What are:

-visual vertical

-practice leaning towards non-paretic side and WB through forearm

-position pt w/ wall next to non-paretic side and ask them to keep their body there

-practice reaching towards non-paretic side

400

A problem w/ oral-motor mechanism due to CN involvement is called this

What is dysarthria?

500

This principle states that infants will have fewer deficits compared to adults w/ same injury

What is the Kennard principle?

500

These are the two main initial management strategies for ICH

What are BP control (SBP <180 or <140) and reversal of anticoagulation?

500

These two imaging scans will help us look at the size of the infarct vs the size of the penumbra with an ischemic stroke

What are CT perfusion head or MRI brain w/ perfusion?

500

These are indications for rhythmic initiation (I listed 6)

What are:

-difficulty relaxing

-hypertonicity

-motor learning deficits

-apraxia

-aphasia

-to learn the pattern for the first time

500

These are three advantages of the Fugl-Meyer over Brunnstrom

What are:

1. More detailed exam of wrist function

2. Inclusion of time coordinated items

3. Standardized ways to test for different grips and grasps