CRRN
EXAM PRACTICE QUESTIONS – UPDATED
CRRN EXAM PRACTICE QUESTIONS – UPDATED
More Than 2000 Questions
SAMPLE QUESTIONS ARE BELOW
2) CN 2 –
OPTICSENSORY.?
Function: Vision.
Intervention: Check visual acuity w/ handheld cards, testing each eye individually; visual field perception; reorient client to environment, position objects around client.
Intervention: Check visual acuity w/ handheld cards, testing each eye individually; visual field perception; reorient client to environment, position objects around client.
3) CN 3 –
OCULOMOTORMOTOR.?
Function: Eye movement/pupil constriction.
Intervention: PERRLA; cardinal fields of gaze; intermittent eye patching; lubricate eyes to protect against corneal abrasions.
Intervention: PERRLA; cardinal fields of gaze; intermittent eye patching; lubricate eyes to protect against corneal abrasions.
CRANIAL NERVES DETAILED BY LBOUZI 12
TERMS
1) CRANIAL NERVE I:
Olfactory
Sensory,
smell.
Passes
through perforations in the cribiform plate of the ethmoid bone and terminate
in the upper part of the nasal cavity.
Contains
the afferant nerve fibers of the olfactory receptor neurons.
Test:
coffee and other smells.
Lesions
to the old factory nerve such as blunt trauma (coup-contra-coup), meningitis,
and tumors of the frontal lobe.
2) CRANIAL NERVE II:
Optic
Sensory,
vision
Optic
nerves from the right and left join to form the optic chiasma
Test:
1. Visual field testing – each I separately
2. Acuity – Snellen chart
3. Funduscopic exam
4. Pupillary light reflex (CN I & CN II)
1. Visual field testing – each I separately
2. Acuity – Snellen chart
3. Funduscopic exam
4. Pupillary light reflex (CN I & CN II)
CRRN BY JODIE THOMPSON 16
·
Rehabilitation
and Goals.?
Rehab is the philosophy of practice and an
attitude toward caring for people with disabilities and chronic heath problems.
Goals are to improve quality of life and help people who have disabilities and
chronic health problems.
·
Rehabilitation
act of 1973.?
1973
·
ARN
standards and scope of rehabilitation nursing practice.?
1976
·
Americans
with Disability Act of 1990.?
*increased accessibility
*increased opportunity for employment, education, health care
*increased opportunity for employment, education, health care
CRRN By Laura Pepper 97 Terms
·
Agnosia
difficulty distinguishing doorbell and
phone ring
·
Apraxia
problem with motor movement, motor planning
·
Dysarthria
D
·
Anomia
…
·
Persevation
Unintentional repetition of a word or
phrase
CRRN BY LEIGH APV 223 TERMS
1) TYPE OF MASSAGE THERAPY
WHICH IS USUALLY DONE WITH RHYTHMIC, BROAD STROKES BEGINNING SOFTLY AND
INCREASING IN INTENSITY TO RELAX THE PERSON AND IDENTIFY AREAS OF TIGHTNESS OR
PAIN.
Effleurage
2) PRESSURE IS APPLIED WITH
A FINGER OR THUMB TO AREAS OF POINT TENDERNESS TO REDUCE SPASTICITY AND PAIN.
Trigger Point
3) DEFINED IN 2000 BY THE
ASSOCIATION OF REHABILITATION NURSES AS “THE DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT OF HUMAN
RESPONSES OF INDIVIDUALS AND GROUPS TO ACTUAL OR POTENTIAL HEALTH PROBLEMS
RELATIVE TO ALTERED FUNCTIONAL ABILITY AND LIFESTYLE”.
Rehabilitation Nursing
4) FOUNDER OF THE RED CROSS.
Clara Barton
5) YEAR WHEN SALK VACCINE
WAS INTRODUCED.
1954
CRRN Exam Review Rehab Nursing By Luggl 12 Terms
·
Rehabilitation
is
A philosophy
An attitude
An approach
An attitude
An approach
·
Rehabilitation
Act of 1973
prohibits discrimination on the basis of
disability in programs conducted by Federal agencies, in programs receiving
Federal financial assistance, in Federal employment, and in the employment
practices of Federal contractors.
·
Education
for all Handicapped Children Act 1975.
required public schools accepting federal
funds to provide equal access to education for children with physical and
mental disabilities
·
Americans
With Disabilities Act 1990.
signed into law under President George H W
Bush. It applies to all private and state-run businesses, employment agencies
to make sure that no person with a disability is turned down for a job or
promotion, or refused entry to a public-access area.
CRRN EXAMINATION BYSHILPA PATEL 74 TERMS
1) WHICH TYPE OF
MASSAGE THERAPY IS USUALLY DONE WITH RHYTHMIC, BROAD STROKES BEGINNING SOFTLY
AND INCREASING IN INTENSITY TO RELAX THE PERSON AND IDENTIFY AREAS OF TIGHTNESS
OR PAIN?
Effleurage
2) PRESSURE IS
APPLIED WITH A FINGER OR THUMB TO AREAS OF POINT TENDERNESS TO REDUCE
SPASTICITY AND PAIN:
Trigger point
3) KNEADING MASSAGE,
USUALLY USED ON LARGE MUSCLE AREAS, SUCH AS THE CALF OR THIGH, TO INCREASE
CIRCULATION:
Petrissage
4) MASSAGE IN LINE
WITH MUSCLE FIBERS OR ACROSS THE MUSCLE FIBERS TO CREATE STRETCHING AND TO
REDUCE ADHESIONS AND SCARRING DURING HEALING:
Friction
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