Exam Three - Chapter Five
Across
- 2. / response-produced information received during or after the movement and is used to monitor output for corrective actions
- 6. / the adoption of alternative behavioral strategies to complete a task
- 7. / the process of registration, retention, and recall of past experience, knowledge, and ideas
- 8. / a temporary impairment in nerve conduction typically caused by some form of local compression or blockage, such as in carpal tunnel syndrome.
- 10. (EMG) / used to evaluate the scope of neuromuscular disorder through assessment of muscle activity
- 11. / a motor disorder characterized by a velocity dependent increase in muscle tone with increased resistance to stretch
- 13. / the clinical judgments therapists make based on the data gathered from their examination.
- 15. Potentials / arise from spontaneous depolarization of a single muscle fiber
- 16. / alerted consciousness in which a person’s level of arouse is diminished
- 17. Conduction Velocity (NCV) / tests determine the speed in which a peripheral motor or sensory nerve conducts an impulse
- 19. / any disease of the nerves
- 21. / the limit of endurance, beyond which no further performance is possible
- 24. Power / work produced per unit of time or the product of strength and speed
- 25. of Function / the reacquisition of movement skills through injury
- 26. / the loss of muscle bulk due to the loss of functional mobility, LMN disease, or protein-calorie malnutrition
Down
- 1. / an overwhelming sustained sense of exhaustion and decreased capacity for physical and mental work at the usual level
- 2. / the sending of signals in advance of movement to ready the sensorimotor systems, allowing for anticipatory adjustment is postural activity
- 3. / a prolonged involuntary movement disorder characterized by twisting or writhing repetitive movements and increased muscular tone
- 4. / a state of arousal accompanied by awareness of one’s environment
- 5. / unconscious and cannot be aroused.
- 7. / a primary muscle disease that may be acquired or congenital
- 9. Structures / functionally specific units of muscles that are constrained by the nervous system to act cooperatively to produce relatively stable movement patterns but are related to the environment
- 12. / hypertonic state characterized by constant resistance throughout range of motion that is independent of the velocity of movement
- 14. / the ability to comprehend and adjust oneself with regard to time, location, and identity of persons
- 18. Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) / documents patient’s level of consciousness in acute brain injury
- 20. of Freedom / the number of separate independent dimensions of movement that must be controlled by engaging in cooperative units of muscle action
- 22. / the directing of consciousness to a person, thing, perception, or thought.
- 23. Memory / the recall of motor programs including information on initial movement conditions, sensory consequences, knowledge of performance, and knowledge of results