Characteristics of simple partial seizurinclude all of the following EXCEPT

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Question 1 of 5

Characteristics of simple partial seizurinclude all of the following EXCEPT

Correct Answer: A

Rationale: Simple partial seizurlack loss of consciousness , per ILAE, preserving awareness during focal motor (versive, B), sensory, or autonomic events lasting 10-20 seconds without postictal confusion . Abnormal EEG is typical. Loss of consciousness defincomplex partial seizures, not simple ones. This awareness distinction, rooted in seizure classification, makes A the exception and correct answer.

Question 2 of 5

Physical featurof Sydenham chorea include all of the following EXCEPT

Correct Answer: A

Rationale: Sydenham chorea, post-streptococcal, featurhypotonia with milkmaids grip , choreic hand , darting tongue , and emotional lability , reflecting basal ganglia dysfunction. Hypertonia contradicts choreas flaccid, involuntary nature; rigidity suggests other conditions (e.g., dystonia). This motor distinction, per rheumatic fever literature, makes A the exception and correct answer.

Question 3 of 5

The grasp and rooting reflexare neonatal reflexthat disappear after six months of life, it may reappear later in life with acquired lesions of the

Correct Answer: A

Rationale: Frontal lobe lesions cause reappearance of grasp and rooting reflexes, per neurology texts, due to loss of inhibitory control from prefrontal areas. These frontal release signs emerge in adults with dementia or stroke, not typically occipital (B, vision), parietal (C, sensation), temporal (D, memory), or cerebellar (E, coordination) damage. Neonatal reflexvanish by 6 months as cortex matures; their return signals frontal dysfunction. This localization, rooted in cortical maturation, makes A the correct answer.

Question 4 of 5

Recoil (the readiness with which an arm or leg springs back to its original position after passive stretching and release) is essentially absent in

Correct Answer: A

Rationale: Very premature infants (A, <32 weeks) lack recoil due to severe hypotonia from immature neuromuscular development, per neonatal assessment. Premature (B, 32-36 weeks) show some recoil; near-term and term infants have robust tone. Post-term may exaggerate it. Recoils absence in extreme prematurity, per NICU standards, makes A the correct answer.

Question 5 of 5

During assessment of the neurological status of a 6-year-old boy, he was asked to smile, blow out his cheeks, blink forcibly, and furrow his forehead. The cranial nerve that is evaluated by doing the above maneuver is

Correct Answer: D

Rationale: Cranial nerve VII (facial nerve, D) controls smiling, cheek puffing, blinking, and forehead furrowing, per neurologic exams. CN III , IV , and VI govern eye movements; VIII hearing. Facial nerve dysfunction (e.g., Bells palsy) impairs these, making D the correct answer.

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