Questão 1
Questão
What angle should the ankle be at in initial contact?
Responda
-
0-Degrees
-
30-Degrees
-
45-Degrees
-
90-Degrees
Questão 2
Questão
If an unexpected obstacle popped up out of the floor what type of postural control would a patient use?
Responda
-
Adaptive
-
Anticipatory
-
Intrinsic
-
Extrinsic
Questão 3
Questão
Which strategy occurs in response to a small perturbation on a firm support surface?
Responda
-
Ankle Strategy
-
Hip Strategy
-
Stepping Strategy
Questão 4
Questão
Which order do the muscles fire in an ankle strategy?
Responda
-
Distal to Proximal
-
Proximal to Distal
Questão 5
Questão
Which of the following represents the proper order of activation for the ANKLE strategy used in response to a FORWARD-induced sway (aka forward-sway, anterior sway, made to move forward)?
Responda
-
Gastrocnemius -> Hamstrings -> Paraspinals
-
Paraspinals -> Hamstrings -> Gastroncnemius
-
Gastrocnemius -> Quadriceps - > Paraspinals
-
Paraspinals -> Quadriceps -> Gastroncnemius
-
Gastrocnemius -> Quadriceps - > Abdominals
-
Abdominals -> Quadriceps -> Gastroncnemius
-
Gastrocnemius -> Hamstrings -> Abdominals
-
Abdominals -> Hamstrings -> Gastroncnemius
Questão 6
Questão
Which of the following represents the proper order of activation for the ANKLE strategy used in response to a BACKWARD-induced sway (aka backward-sway, posterior-sway, made to move backward)?
Responda
-
Tibialis Anterior -> Quadriceps -> Abdominals
-
Abdominals -> Quadriceps -> Tibialis Anterior
-
Tibialis Anterior -> Hamstrings -> Abdominals
-
Abdominals -> Hamstrings -> Tibialis Anterior
-
Gastrocnemius -> Quadriceps -> Abdominals
-
Abdominals -> Quadriceps -> Gastrocnemius
-
Gastrocnemius -> Hamstrings -> Abdominals
-
Abdominals -> Hamstrings -> Gastrocnemius
Questão 7
Questão
Which strategy occurs in response to larger or faster perturbations, or when the support surface is compliant (i.e. soft), or very narrow (i.e. a balance beam).
Responda
-
Ankle Strategy
-
Hip Strategy
-
Stepping Strategy
Questão 8
Questão
Which direction do the muscles fire in a hip strategy?
Responda
-
proximal to distal
-
distal to proximal
Questão 9
Questão
Which of the following represents the proper order of activation for the HIP strategy used in response to a BACKWARD-induced sway (aka backward-sway, posterior-sway, made to move backward)?
Responda
-
Paraspinals -> Hamstrings
-
Hamstrings -> Paraspinals
-
Paraspinals -> Quadriceps
-
Quadriceps -> Paraspinals
-
Paraspinals -> Gluteals
-
Gluteals -> Quadriceps
-
Hamstrings -> Gluteals
Questão 10
Questão
Which of the following represents the proper order of activation for the HIP strategy used in response to a FORWARD-induced sway (aka forward-sway, anterior sway, made to move forward)?
Responda
-
Abdominals -> Quadriceps
-
Quadriceps -> Abdominals
-
Abdominals -> Hamstrings
-
Hamstrings -> Abdominals
Questão 11
Questão
Which postural strategy utilizes UE movements
Responda
-
Ankle Strategy
-
Hip Strategy
-
Stepping Strategy
-
All of the Above
-
None of the Above
Questão 12
Questão
If the necessary musculature for a given strategy is significantly weak (weak ankle or trunk musculature), a stepping strategy may be employed instead.
Questão 13
Questão
If someone were standing on a foam-pad and they were pushed forward what muscles would they recruit to prevent LOB? Which strategy is this?
Responda
-
Abdominals -> Quadriceps
-
Hip Strategy
-
Ankle Strategy
-
Quadriceps -> Abdominals
-
Stepping Strategy
-
Gastrocnemius -> Hamstrings -> Paraspinals
-
Paraspinals -> Hamstrings -> Gastrocnemius
-
Paraspinals -> Hamstrings
-
Tibialis Anterior -> Quadriceps -> Abdominals
Questão 14
Questão
If you were to nudge a patient on his sternum in a posterior direction on a firm surface what postural strategy do you think he might use? What muscles would be activated (in order of activation) to prevent a LOB?
Responda
-
Ankle Strategy - Posterior Sway
-
Tibialis Anterior -> Quadriceps -> Abdominals
-
Abdominals -> Quadriceps
-
Gastrocnemius -> Hamstrings -> Paraspinals
-
Paraspinals -> Hamstrings
-
Abdominals -> Quadriceps -> Tibialis Anterior
-
Quadriceps -> Abdominals
-
Paraspinals -> Hamstrings -> Gastrocnemius
Questão 15
Questão
If you were to ask a patient to stand on a piece of foam what sensory system(s) would be providing inaccurate information for postural control? What system(s) would be providing accurate information?
Questão 16
Questão
Which test(s) would you use to test somatosensation, vision, and the vestibular system?
Questão 17
Questão
Which system do young children typically rely upon for balance?
Responda
-
Vision
-
somatosensation
-
vestibular
Questão 18
Questão
Which of the following conditions is most likely to have scaling difficulties with the postural synergies?
Responda
-
Parkinson's Disease
-
Lesion of Cerebellum
-
Traumatic Brain Injury
-
Stroke
-
Multiple Sclerosis
Questão 19
Questão
Which of the following conditions is most likely to demonstrate coactivation of the postural synergies?
Responda
-
Parkinson's Disease
-
Lesion of Cerebellum
-
Multiple Sclerosis
-
Stroke
-
Traumatic Brain Injury
Questão 20
Questão
Which of the following tests assess anticipatory postural control?
Questão 21
Questão
If an individual has an inferior shoulder subluxation, what is the position of the humerus, humeral head, and scapula?
Responda
-
Humeral Head is below the inferior lip of the glenoid fossa
-
Humerus is in internal rotation
-
Scapula is depressed and downwardly rotated, with the inferior angle of the scapula winging
-
Scapula is depressed and upwardly rotated, with the inferior angle of the scapula winging
-
Humeral Head is behind the posterior lip of the glenoid fossa
-
Humeral Head is in front of the anterior lip of the glenoid fossa
Questão 22
Questão
Select the Intrinsic Causes of Shoulder Subluxation.
Responda
-
Trunk – Joint Malalignment
-
Imbalance of Muscle Activation
-
Weakness
-
Tone Abnormalities
-
Soft Tissue Extensibility
-
Positioning
-
Handling
-
Assistive Devices
Questão 23
Questão
Which of the following are in agreement with Fitts' Law?
Responda
-
Assuming a static distance, if target size decreases, the time to reach it increases.
-
Assuming a static distance, if target size increases, the time to reach it increases.
-
Assuming a static target size, if distance increases, the time to reach it increases.
-
Assuming a static target size, if distance decreases, the time to reach it increases.
-
Movement time is a function of the distance to the target and the accuracy needed to hit the target.
-
There is a positive correlation between movement precision, movement distance, and movement time.
-
There is a negative correlation between movement precision, movement distance, and movement time.
Questão 24
Questão
What are the 2 requirements for a successful grasp?
Responda
-
Hand must be adapted to the shape, size, and use of the object.
-
Finger movements must be timed so that they close around the object at the appropriate moment.
-
Subject must be strong enough to lift the object.
-
Subject must be able to see the object in order to grasp it successfully.
Questão 25
Questão
Moving the arm into shoulder flexion or abduction without proper scapulohumeral rhythm, may cause which of the following?
Responda
-
Shoulder Subluxation
-
Shoulder Impingement
Questão 26
Questão
Without proper scapulohumeral rhythm, which of the following motions are likely to cause shoulder impingement?
Questão 27
Questão
[blank_start]Action Research Arm[blank_end] Test - Assesses upper limb functioning using observational methods
[blank_start]Box and Block[blank_end] Test - Assesses unilateral gross manual dexterity
[blank_start]Wolf Motor Function[blank_end] Test - Quantitative measure of upper extremity motor ability through timed and functional tasks.
Responda
-
Action Research Arm
-
Box and Block
-
Wolf Motor Function
-
Box and Block
-
Wolf Motor Function
-
Action Research Arm
-
Wolf Motor Function
-
Action Research Arm
-
Box and Block
Questão 28
Questão
What neurological diagnosis do you think is likely to have motor adaptation problems?
Responda
-
Stroke
-
Multiple Sclerosis
-
Parkinson's Disease
-
Traumatic Brain Injury
-
Lesion of the Cerebellum
Questão 29
Questão
Hypermetric scaling is likely to result from which of the following?
Responda
-
Lesion of the Cerebellum
-
Traumatic Brain Injury
-
Parkinson's Disease
-
Multiple Sclerosis
-
Stroke
Questão 30
Questão
What neurologic condition will result in delayed initiation of reaching tasks?
Responda
-
Parkinson's Disease
-
Traumatic Brain Injury
-
Lesion of the Cerebellum
-
Multiple Sclerosis
-
Stroke
Questão 31
Questão
In a reach-and-grasp task, which of the following elements is most important for the accuracy of the movement?
Responda
-
Visual Feedback
-
Proprioceptive Feedback
-
Somatosensory Feedback
-
Speed of Movement
-
Distance to Object
Questão 32
Questão
Which of the following may cause shoulder pain?
Responda
-
Loss of scapulohumeral rhythm
-
Inadequate external rotation of the humerus during flexion and abduction leading to impingement
-
Lack of the downward gliding movement of the head of the humerus in the glenoid fossa resulting in impingement
-
Inferior Shoulder Subluxation
Questão 33
Questão
[blank_start]Progression[blank_end]: Rhythmic patterns of muscle activation advance the body in the desired direction. Also includes the ability to initiate, terminate and guide movement in a desired direction.
[blank_start]Stability[blank_end]: The ability to maintain upright posture against gravity and against perturbations (expected and unexpected) during gait.
[blank_start]Adaptation[blank_end]: The ability to alter the gait pattern to meet the demands of the environment (negotiating obstacles, uneven terrain, and altering speed and direction).
Responda
-
Progression
-
Stability
-
Adaptation
-
Stability
-
Adaptation
-
Progression
-
Adaptation
-
Progression
-
Stability
Questão 34
Questão
[blank_start]Step Length[blank_end] - The distance from initial contact of one foot to initial contact of the other foot.
[blank_start]Stride Length[blank_end] - The distance covered from initial contact of one foot to the following initial contact by the same foot.
[blank_start]Step Width[blank_end] - Horizontal distance between the middle heel of one foot and the middle heel of the opposite foot
[blank_start]Cadence[blank_end] - The number of steps per unit of time (112.5 per minute or 1.9 steps/second)
[blank_start]Gait Velocity[blank_end] - The average horizontal speed of the body.
Responda
-
Step Length
-
Stride Length
-
Step Width
-
Stride Length
-
Step Width
-
Step Length
-
Step Width
-
Step Length
-
Stride Length
-
Cadence
-
Gait Velocity
-
Gait Velocity
-
Cadence
Questão 35
Questão
[blank_start]Temporal Cortex[blank_end] - ID what an object is
[blank_start]Parietal Lobe[blank_end] - ID where an object is
[blank_start]Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia[blank_end] - Modify and Refine Movement
[blank_start]Motor Cortex[blank_end] - Activates motor pathways according to movement plan
[blank_start]Cerebellum[blank_end] - Error Detection/Correction during movement
Responda
-
Temporal Cortex
-
Parietal Lobe
-
Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia
-
Motor Cortex
-
Cerebellum
-
Parietal Lobe
-
Cerebellum
-
Temporal Cortex
-
Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia
-
Motor Cortex
-
Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia
-
Motor Cortex
-
Cerebellum
-
Parietal Lobe
-
Temporal Cortex
-
Motor Cortex
-
Temporal Cortex
-
Cerebellum
-
Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia
-
Parietal Lobe
-
Cerebellum
-
Parietal Lobe
-
Temporal Cortex
-
Cerebellum and Basal Ganglia
-
Motor Cortex
Questão 36
Questão
While moving both arms towards targets of identical size and distance, one arm had to mover over a hurdle, but the other did not. Movement time increased for both arms. Why?
Responda
-
Temporal Assimilation
-
Spatial Assimilation
-
Bimanual Timing
Questão 37
Questão
While moving both arms towards targets of identical size and distance, one arm had to move over a hurdle, but the other did not. The movement trajectory increased for the arm moving over the hurdle, but so did the trajectory for the other arm. Why?
Responda
-
Bimanual Timing
-
Spatial Assimilation
-
Temporal Assimilation
Questão 38
Questão
Limbs like to time movement together, either in-phase or out-of-phase. Why?
Responda
-
Bimanual Timing
-
Spatial Assimilation
-
Temporal Assimilation
Questão 39
Questão
According the Sensory Organization test (SOT/ CTSIB) which of the following conditions isolates the vestibular system:
Responda
-
Standing, platform fixed, eyes blindfolded
-
Standing, platform fixed, visual box surrounding subject is fixed, eyes open
-
Standing, platform tilts, eyes blindfolded
-
Standing, platform tilts, visual box surrounding subject is fixed, eyes open
Questão 40
Questão
You are standing in soft sand with your feet together when your friend unexpectedly pushes you forward? To prevent a loss of balance you respond with the following muscle activation pattern (in order of recruitment):
Responda
-
Abdominals, quadriceps
-
Abdominals, quadriceps, tibialis anterior
-
Gastrocnemius, hamstrings, paraspinals
-
Hamstrings, paraspinals
Questão 41
Questão
Individuals with co-activation of the postural synergies most likely have a lesion in which area of the central nervous system:
Responda
-
Basal Ganglia
-
Cerebellum
-
Dorsal Columns
-
Internal Capsule
Questão 42
Questão
You are standing in the dark on a pillow, in order to maintain postural stability your CNS is primarily relying on your:
Responda
-
Limbic system
-
Somatosensory system
-
Vestibular system
-
Visual system
Questão 43
Questão
You are walking through the forest when you unexpectedly trip on a tree root requiring you to employ a postural strategy to prevent you from falling down? This is an example of:
Responda
-
Feedback control
-
Feedforward control
-
Self-initiated control
Questão 44
Questão
While walking with your patient, she encounters a freshly mopped floor? Prior to stepping onto the wet surface, she slows her walking and begins taking short, shuffling steps? Which of the following best describes your observations?
Responda
-
Her hip flexors are fatigued and her step length is therefore reduced
-
She is using adaptive, feed-back strategies to modify her gait
-
She is using anticipatory strategies to modify her gait
-
She is using her central pattern generator to adapt her walking to the environment
Questão 45
Questão
A Trendelenberg gait pattern is the _________gait pattern due to ________.
Responda
-
Compensatory; hip adductor tightness
-
Compensatory; hip extensor tightness
-
Resultant; hip abductor weakness
-
Resultant; hip flexor weakness
Questão 46
Questão
Which of the following best explains why the pelvis rotates forward during gait?
Responda
-
To minimize medial-lateral displacement
-
To minimize the knee extension at initial contact
-
To minimize vertical displacement and energy expenditure
-
To prevent knee buckling and minimize the required ankle DF at initial contact
Questão 47
Questão
During stance, individuals with hip extensor weakness compensate by:
Responda
-
Circumducting the leg during the swing phase
-
Leaning their trunk forward (anteriorly)
-
Using a posterior trunk lean to minimize muscle activation
-
Vaulting to minimize use of the involved leg
Questão 48
Questão
Which muscle group controls the knee from the end of the loading response to midstance (i.e. from 15 degrees of flexion to 0 degrees of flexion)?
Questão 49
Questão
Which of the following is the correct order of events for a normal reach and grasp?
Responda
-
Eye movement to locate object, head turning, arm transport, hand pre-shaping, grasp
-
Eye movement to locate object, head turning, hand pre-shaping during arm transport, grasp
-
Head turning to locate object, eye movement & vision to identify what and where, hand pre-shaping, arm transport, grasp
-
Head turning, eye movement & vision to identify what and where, hand pre-shaping during arm transport, grasp
Questão 50
Questão
Your patient's right arm is weaker than her left arm. During bimanual tasks you observe that the right arm is able to move faster (more like the left arm) than when the arm is moved individually? This is known as:
Responda
-
Movement assimilation
-
Spatial assimilation
-
Temporal assimilation
-
Trajectory assimilation
Questão 51
Questão
During examination of UE control, you observe your patient reach for an object. The patient exhibits slow movement and movement decomposition to reach the object. When asked to reach quickly, the patient over-shoots the object. Strength testing reveals good to normal UE strength. Sensation is intact. Where is this lesion?
Responda
-
Basal ganglia
-
Cerebellum
-
Corticospinal tracts
-
Peripheral nerve
Questão 52
Questão
Which of the following is true regarding shoulder subluxation?
Responda
-
Pain is one of the first symptoms of a subluxed shoulder
-
Shoulder subluxation can be caused by weakness and abnormalities of tone
-
After stroke, shoulder subluxation can be caused by a tear in the labrum
-
Shoulder subluxation is rare and takes months to develop
Questão 53
Questão
Which of the following is true regarding examination and treatment of shoulder dysfunction?
Responda
-
An inferior subluxation is measured in centimeters to objectively document the amount of subluxation
-
It is important to examine trunk posture in persons with shoulder dysfunction
-
Patients with subluxation should immobilize their shoulder to prevent further dysfunction
-
Slings should not be used when gait training with persons with shoulder dysfunction