Reference no: EM133860245
The majority of the points of the sample population would fall on the dome of the bell-shaped curve. At the peak of the dome would be those individuals whose height approaches the average of all the heights. Scientists use curves in determining what they call normal criteria. By accepted statistical criteria, 95 percent of the population measured would be included in the normal range-that is, 47.5 percent above and 47.5 percent below the mean at the very centre of the bell.
1. What is the best treatment for rubral tremors besides treating the aetiology?
2. What is meant by 'inversion of reflexes'? I have found this term in a few membership exams.
3. Is it possible for patients with posterior column lesions to be suffering from allodynia, with pain on pressure to different musculoskeletal points? Or is this more likely to be caused by fibromyalgia?
4. How do the clinical success rates of gabapentin and carbamazepine compare?
5. What clinical tests can be done to determine dissociative sensory loss?
6. What is the recommended dose of urograffin before performing contrastenhanced computed tomography? How far in advance should this be administered before imaging when an intracerebral abscess or glial tumour is suspected?
7. How many urografin ampoules (76% concentration) should be administered before a CT brain scan with contrast searching for a mass lesion, and how many minutes before imaging should these be injected?
8. 1. What is the difference between fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) and T2-weighted MRI scans?
2. What is the advantage of magnetization transfer pulse over a FLAIR MRI scan?
9. Does lumbosacral MRI refer to lumbosacral spines or to lumbosacral cord segments?
10. What type of painful stimuli can be applied in calculating the Glasgow Coma Scale for both motor and eye-opening responses, and how should these be applied?