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PA Quiz #2

Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in each of the black spaces below before clicking on it to display the answer.
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Question
Answer
Is pain normal?   Yes  
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Where does pain originate from?   Pain is an output from the brain  
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What are the components of pain?   Contextual and learned information  
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How is pain perceived?   1) Cognitive value and response priority 2) Past experience 3) Sensory, emotional, motor, & cultural 4) Protection from further injury  
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What are the 2 best predictors of someone going into a chronic pain state?   Happiness and home and at work  
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What source of pain is transmitted via A delta and C fibers to dorsal horn and to brain?   Peripheral Nociceptive  
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What source of pain creates abnormal impulse generator sites (AIGS)?   Peripheral Neurogenic  
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What is the source of pain when the nerve is stripped of myelin?   Peripheral Neurogenic  
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What source creates abnormal pain states?   Central pain  
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Pain provoked by stimulus that does not typically cause pain:   Allodynia  
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Heightened response to a pain stimulus:   Hyperalgesia  
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Pain that lasts longer than 6 months:   Chronic Pain  
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A patient with chronic pain will exhibit what symptoms?   Fatigued, depressed, fatigues easily  
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What source of pain is RSD or Complex Regional Pain Syndromes?   Sympathetic Nervous system  
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What are the afferent types of pain?   Interoceptors, Exteroceptors, Propioceptors, & Large Aδ & Large C  
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What type of afferent pain receptors are: internal, always sensing what's going on inside the body (ie: bp, blood oxygen, gases, etc)?   Interoceptors  
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What type of afferent pain receptors are: anything that receives and respons to some sort of stimulus that originates outside of the body (ie: ears, eyes, nose, skin, etc)?   Exteroceptors  
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What type of afferent pain receptors are: both intero- and extero-receptors (muscles, tendons, joints); give info to the CNS about movement, positon of limbs, the trun, the head and neck, etc; and is used when eyes are closed?   Propioceptors  
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What type of afferent pain receptors are: fast and first interpetation of pain; respon more to stimuli such as cold and pressure; mylenated; reason why you "react" to pain?   Large Aδ  
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What type of afferent pain receptors are: Slower and secondary; Somatic nervous system; pain generated months later; unmylenated; responds to stimuli strong intensity; chronic pain or neuropathy; react to thermal, mechanical & chemical stimuli   Large C  
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Diameter = 0.2-1.5 um; velocity = no more than 2 m/sec   Large C  
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Diameter = 1-5 um; velocity = 2-30 m/sec   Large Aδ  
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Sensation is perceived as sharp, pricking for a short duration:   A delta  
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Sensitive to very intense mechanical and temperature:   C Fibers  
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Temperature ranges from less than 59 deg F to greater than 123 deg. F   C Fibers  
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What are the non-nociceptive afferents?   Mechanoreceptors, Proprioceptors, & thermoreceptors  
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The mechanorecptor that: found in dermis; sensitive to light touch; unmylenated nerve endings:   Meissner's corpuscles  
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The mechanoreceptor that: detects deep pressure; rough & smooth textures:   Pacinian Corpuscles  
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The mechanoreceptor that: responds to pressure and texture:   Merke's discs  
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THe mechanoreceptor that: deeper in ski tissues; act as thermoreceptors:   Ruffini ending  
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Where to propioreceptors exist?   Joint capsules, muscles, tendons  
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Sense change in temperature in the skin, joint capsules, and ligaments:   Thermoreceptors  
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These are always scanning the system, making sure everything is running as it should:   Homeostatic Receptors  
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Where do afferents enter the spine?   Dorsal portion of the spinal nerve  
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Where does 2 point discrimination and propioception enter the spine?   Medial portion of the dorsal root  
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Where do pain signals enter the spine?   Lateral horn  
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Where do nocicpetion enter the spine?   Lateral portion of the dorsal root  
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The PRIMARY nociceptive pathway:   Spinothalamic tract  
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What type of pain is associated with the spinothalamic tract?   Discriminative pain (type of pain & location of pain)  
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In the spinothalamic tract where does temperature come from?   Lateral spinothalamic tract  
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In the spionothalamic tract where does crude touch come from?   Anterior/Ventral spionothalamic tract  
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In the spinothalamic tract where does pressure come from?   Anterior/Ventral spionothalamic tract  
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What is acute pain?   Sharp, localized, rapid onset, short duration, warning of tissue damage  
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What is referred pain?   Pain at a site remote from the source of pathology, usually visceral  
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What is persistent pain?   Recurrent or episodic pain, accompany reinjury, chronic condition  
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Assessment scales should include:   Severity, location, quality, non-verbal cues, mode, duration, provocative and relieving factors  
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Why should we assess sensation?   Determine location of loss, follow nerve damage, before using modalities, SAFETY  
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Where are ALL sensory neuron cell bodies?   In the dorsal root ganglia  
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What receptors respond to tonic activity?   Pacinian Corpuscles  
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Nerve fiber that fires in response to damaging or potentially damaging stimuli?   Nocicpetors  
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When do cold fibers being to fire to cold?   below 20 deg. C and above 45 deg C  
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It is common to lose _____ and ______ sense together.   Vibration, position  
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Propioceptors involve:   Muscle spindle, GTO, FNE, & Pacinian corpuscle  
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What type of test is: place a familiar object in the hand and have the patient tell you what it is   Stereoaugnosis  
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What type of test is: being able to tell where the pressure is being applied   Tactile Location  
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What type of test is: Place 2 objects of different weights in their hands and the pt identifies which one is heavier.   Barioaugnosis  
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What type of test is: recognizing a letter or design on any part of the body but especially in the hand   Graphesthesia  
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What type of test is:being able to recognize different textures   Texture  
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