Sensory alterations Flashcards

1
Q

What is the reticular activating system and what is it responsible for?

A

Nervous system

Responsible for bringing together information from the cerebellum and other parts of the body

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2
Q

What is a sensory deficit?

A

Absent functioning in one or more senses

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3
Q

What is sensory deprivation?

A

Inadequate quality or quantity of stimulation

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4
Q

What is sensory overload?

A

Reception of multiple sensory stimuli

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5
Q

What is perception?

A

How one processes/views information

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6
Q

Why are older adults at risk for altered sensory function?

A

Proprioceptive changes

Sensory changes

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7
Q

How should an older adult check water temperature?

A

With their elbow

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8
Q

What is presbyopia?

A

Farsightedness caused by loss of elasticity of the lens of the eye, occurring typically in middle and old age

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9
Q

What is a cataract?

A

A clouding of the lens in the eye that affects vision

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10
Q

What is glaucoma?

A

When pressure in the eye rises and intraocular pressure increases. Could cause damage to the optic nerve and blindness

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11
Q

What is diabetic retinopathy?

A

Decrease in eyesight due to damage to the blood vessels in the retina

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12
Q

What is macular degeneration?

A

Abnormal blood vessels leak fluid or blood in the region of the macula

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13
Q

What is myopia?

A

Nearsightedness

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14
Q

How are cataracts treated?

A

Surgery

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15
Q

What is presbycusis

A

The slow and progressive loss of hearing due to age. Can be mild, moderate, or severe

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16
Q

What is a symptom of age-related hearing loss?

A

Tinnitus

17
Q

What are some common auditory deficits?

A

Presbycusis, balance, dizziness, disequilibrium

18
Q

What is xerostomia?

A

Dry mouth

19
Q

What are common neurological sensory deficits?

A

Peripheral neuropathy

20
Q

What are age-related sensory alterations of vision?

A

Presbyopia, reduced visual fields, increased glare sensitivity, decreased night vision, reduced depth perception

21
Q

What happens when cataracts form?

A

Cloudy lenses
Blurry vision
Dull colors

22
Q

What happens during glaucoma?

A

Damage to optic nerve
Loss of peripheral vision
Eye drops for treatment
Cannot reverse damage that has occurred

23
Q

What happens is macular degeneration?

A

Loss of central vision - high concentration of rods and cones
Accumulation of deposits on macula cells

24
Q

What is expressive aphasia?

A

Inability to name common objects or express simple ideas in words or writing (more common with L CVA)

25
Q

What is sensory or receptive aphasia?

A

The inability to understand written or spoken language. (more common with R CVA)

26
Q

What is global aphasia?

A

Both expressive aphasia and receptive aphasia

27
Q

How do you community with a patient with hearing loss?

A

Stand in front of client and make eye contact
Reduce background noise
Speak slowly and articulate clearly
Emphasize consonants
If a question is not understood, rephrase the question
Use written cues and hand gestures