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27 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
Q. The elbow is what type of joint?
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Ginglymus hinge joint
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Q. what is the carrying angle of the elbow in males & females?
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Males: 5
Femles: 10-15 |
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Q. Which is more common, lateral or medial epicodyle?
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Lateral epicondyle
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Q. Which carpal bone is commonly fractured and can develop avascular necrosis?
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Navicular
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Q. What is the largest joint in the body?
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The knee
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Q most common injury of the foot and ankle?
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ant-talofibular ligament
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Q. Inversion is supination or pronation?
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supination
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Q. Eversion is supination or pronation?
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Pronation
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Q. What percentage is the stance phase?
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60%
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Q. What percentage is the swing phase?
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40%
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Q. who is the father of muscle energy techninque?
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Fred L. Mitchell
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Q. What is muscle energy technique?
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series of muscle contractions against resistence
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Q. CLinical uses of muscle energy technique?
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1. To lengethen a shortened, contractured, or spastic muscle
2. to strengthen a physiollogically weakend muscle 3. to reduced localized edema and relieve passive congestion 4. to mobilize an articulation with restricted mobility |
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Q. Isometric?
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the distance between the origin and insertion of a muscle is maintained at a constant length
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Q. Concentric Isotonic?
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The origin and insertion of a muscle under tension gets closer together
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Q. Eccentric isotonic?
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The origin and insertion of a muscle under tension seperates
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Q. isolytic?
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The patient attempts a concentric contraction while the operator applies a counter force in opposite direction
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Q. Five elements essential for successful muscle energy procedure?
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1. Patient-active muscle contraction
2. controlled joint position 3. muscle contraction in a specific direction 4. operator-applied distinct counterforce 5. controlled contraction intensity |
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Q. Who was the developer of Craniosacral techinique?
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William G Sutherland
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Q. Which bones are responsible for flexion/extension?
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Midline Bones
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Q. Which bones are responsible for Internal/external rotation?
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Paired Bones
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Q. What are 3 activating forces in craniosacral technique?
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1. The inherent primary respiratory mechanism
2. respiratory assistance 3. movement of the sacrum and feet |
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Q. In regards to motion, what is restriction?
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impairment to normal physiological motion within body
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Q. What is it called when restriction dissipates?
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Release
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Q. T or F? Release is always a therapeutically positive even?
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True
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Q. what is it called when the palpating part of your body does what the patients body is doing?
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Melding
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Q. 4 Cautions when performing craniosacral release?
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1. acute intracranial hemorrhage
2. intracranial aneurysm 3. recent skull fracture 4. herniation of the medulla oblongata |