
OMT Review Book Ch. 8-11
Quiz by Seleste Parma
Tag the questions with any skills you have. Your dashboard will track each student's mastery of each skill.
Which ligaments attach to the femur?
The patella attaches to the ___ superiorly.
The patella attaches to the ___ inferiorly.
Which of the following is a Y ligament and is the strongest ligament in the body?
Which of the following is a ligament at the head of the femur attaching to the acetabular fossa?
The head of the femur glides ___ with ER of the hip.
The head of the femur glides ___ with IR of the hip.
If someone has an ER SD of the hip, what are most likely the causes?
If someone has an IR SD of the hip, what are most likely the causes?
Match the following.
The fibular head will glide __ with external rotation of the tibia.
The fibular head will glide __ with internal rotation of the tibia.
The fibular head will glide __ with protonation of the foot.
The fibular head will glide __ with supination of the foot.
What nerve roots are associated with the femoral nerve?
What nerve roots are associated with the sciatic nerve?
What nerve innervates the quad, iliacus, sartorius, and pectineus?
What nerve innervates the hamstring except the short head of biceps femoris, most plantar flexors, and toe flexors?
What nerve innervates the short head of biceps femoris, evertors, dorsiflexors, and most extensors of the toes?
What nerve provides sensation to the anterior thigh and medial leg?
What nerve provides sensation to the lower leg and plantar aspect of the foot?
What nerve provides sensation to the lower leg and dorsum of the foot?
What is normal Q angle?
What is genu varum for Q angle?
The Q angle is formed from intersecting lines from ___ meeting at the middle of the patella.
Which of the following is associated with a posterior fibular head?
What nerve is injured in a posterior fibular head or a fibula fracture?
Patello-femoral syndrome is associated with a ___ Q angle?
What makes up the terrible triad?
The ankle is more stable in
What makes up the transverse arch?
What is part of the PRM?
Which of the following is the PRM composed of?
How is the rhythmic motion of the brain and spinal cord described?
The ___ is the core link because of the potential to transmit biomechanical forces linking the cranium to the sacrum.
What part of the sacrum does the dura attach to?
A rocking motion of the sacrum occurs about a __ axis that runs through the superior transverse axis of the sacrum located near S2, just posterior to the spinal canal.
Which of the following are midline bones?
Which of the following results in an increase of AP diameter of the head?
Which bone mainly tells you about flexion and extension of the cranium?
A patient has a cranial dysfunction where the sphenoid rotates in one direction about an AP axis while the occiput and and posterior cranium rotate in the opposite direction. What strain pattern do they have?
Which of the following is named for the greater wing of the sphenoid that is more superior?
A patient has a cranial dysfunction where the sphenoid and occiput rotate in the same direction. What strain pattern do they have?
A patient has a cranial dysfunction where the SBS deviates. What strain pattern do they have?
A patient has a cranial dysfunction where the sphenoid deviates cephalad or caudad in relation to the occiput. What strain pattern do they have?
A patient has a cranial dysfunction where the sphenoid deviates laterally in relation to the occiput. What strain pattern do they have?
A patient has a cranial dysfunction where the sphenoid and occiput have been pushed together. What strain pattern do they have?
What strain pattern is more common due to trauma to the back or front of the head or childbirth?
Somatic dysfunctions of which of the following bones would result in CN II injury?
Somatic dysfunction of which bone would affect CN V?
Which of the following can cause vagal SD?
A patient is experiencing tinnitus, vertigo and hearing loss. What nerve is dysfunctional?
A baby is having trouble with suckling and they have a dysfunction of the occipital bone. What nerve is dysfunctional?
The jugular foramen lies along the OM suture so compression may affect
Match the vault hold position.
Which technique improves the CRI?
Which of the following are indications of cranial treatment?
Which of the following are absolute CI to cranial techniques?
Which of the following are absolute CI to cranial techniques?
Which cranial nerve controls the lacrimal, nasal, submandibular, and sublingual glands?
Which cranial nerve controls the parotid gland?
Which cranial nerve controls the heart, bronchial tree, GI system (except desc colon, sigmoid and rectum), ovaries/testes, and the kidney?
Which cranial nerve controls the lower ureter, bladder, uterus, prostate, genitalia, dec colon, sigmoid colon, and rectum?
What is the purpose of soft tissue paraspinal inhibition?
What is the purpose of celiac ganglion, SMG, and IMG releases?
What is the purpose of treating Chapman's reflexes?
What is the purpose of sphenopalantine ganglion release?
What does a trigger point represent?
Which of the following refers pain when compressed?
Sort the characteristics.