EEG BOARD EXAM ACTUAL EXAM AND PRACTICE
QUESTIONS EXAM COMPLETE ACCURATE EXAM
QUESTIONS WITH DETAILED VERIFIED ANSWERS
(100% CORRECT ANSWERS) /ALREADY GRADED A+
Hyperventilation - ANSWERWhat activation is useful for detecting absence seizures?
sleep activation - ANSWERWhat activation is useful for detecting benign rolandic
epilepsy?
Anterior Cerebral Artery - ANSWERWhich artery supplies the frontal pole and mesial
cortex of frontal/parietal lobes?
CN VIII (Vestibulocochlear) - ANSWERWhich nerve is affected with
neurofibromatosis/Von Recklinhausen's?
ACTH (Adrenocorticotropic hormone) - ANSWERWhat drug treats infantile spasms?
Active Sleep - ANSWER________ _________ in infants shows REM, irregular
breathing, smile, grimace, sucking, brief apnea, decreased tonic
Activite Moyenne - ANSWER______ _________ is low voltage irregular theta and delta
waves, 34-37 weeks
PLED's - ANSWERWhat pattern would you expect after a CVA?
frontal; contralateral - ANSWERAdversive seizures are from the ________ lobe with a
__________ focus
Neck rotation and conjugate gaze deviation in direction contralateral to epileptic focus -
ANSWERWhat does the body do during an adversive seizure?
parietal - ANSWERAgraphia occurs from damage to the dominant __________ lobe
Aicardi - ANSWER___________ syndrome occurs in females.absence/agenesis of
corpus callosum. Infantile spasms early onset. Often asymmetric, diffuse EEG w/
suppression bursts and/or atypical hypsarrhythmia.
,EEG normal 90% time, with increased photomyoclonic reactivity. Minor theta/beta
anomalies possible - ANSWERWhat EEG changes might you see with alcohol
withdrawal?
voltage/alpha diminish, theta then delta intrude w/ sharps, asymmetries may develop,
less sleep signs - ANSWERWhat EEG changes would you see w/ Alzheimer's?
amoxycillin - ANSWERWhich anti-biotic can cause seizures which are unresponsive to
AED's?
Ampere - ANSWERWhat is the unit of current?
olfactory; gustatory - ANSWERAmygdalar temp lobe sz can have ___________ and
________ hallucinations
generalized slowing (hypoxia) - ANSWERALS has normal EEG until weakness makes it
harder to breathe, so the EEG then has ______ ________
angiography - ANSWER_________ is x-ray with contrast media
anterograde - ANSWER__________ amnesia is loss of memory for periods of time
following accident
increased theta/beta - ANSWERAntihistamines commonly cause what changes in the
EEG at the therapeutic levels?
Antipsychotic drugs - ANSWERChlorpromazine (Thorazine), haloperidol (haldol),
clozapine (clozaril), and risperidone are examples of what kind of drug?
apraxia - ANSWER________ is the inability to perform purposeful movement though no
muscular or sensory disturbance is present
between the third to fourth ventricle - ANSWERWhere is the aqueduct of sylvius
located?
Area 6 - ANSWERWhich Brodmann's area is the premotor area?
Area 17 - ANSWERWhich Brodmann's area is the primary visual area (most forms walls
of deep calcarine sulcus)?
Area 18 and Area 19 - ANSWERWhich two Brodmann's area is the visual association
areas?
Area 41 - ANSWERWhich Brodmann's area is the primary auditory area?
, Arnold-Chiari - ANSWER__________ is a congenital anomaly when the hindbrain is
displaced through the foramen magnum.
aterixis - ANSWER___________ is a flapping tremor of hand when wrist extended,
resembling bird flapping wings
ataxia - ANSWER_____________ is a lack of voluntary coordination of muscles,
including gait
benzodiazepine - ANSWERAtivan (Lorazepam) is classified as a _____________
abnormal background; slow variant spike-wave complexes. Twitch and stare but without
LOC - ANSWERHow is atypical absence different?
uncus of temporal lobe - ANSWERWhere would a seizure originate from if there was an
unpleasant olfactory aura?
axon hillock - ANSWERWhere is the site of action potential generation?
Bancaud's phenomenon - ANSWERWith __________ _________, there is unilateral
loss of reactivity of a normal rhythm and initially was described in the context of the
alpha rhythm. It should be considered a pathological finding only when associated with
other more definite abnormalities, such as slowing. Side lacking "blocking" or alpha
attenuation with EO is abnormal
Basal Ganglia - ANSWER________ _________ is a collection of neuronal masses/gray
matter. Includes caudate nucleus, putamen, & globus pallidus. Support fine coordination
for locomotion, movements fine and gross, balance, posture, muscle tone. Important for
learning non-declarative habits, procedures, patterns of behavior. Disruption of function
causes rigidity and losses in coordination (Parkinson's)
Name of tech, date, ID number, EEG indication, last event, behavioral state, meds, skull
defects, electrode placement modifications, med history, handedness, time of last meal,
sleep - ANSWERWhat information should be on the Basic Data Sheet?
Batten's - ANSWER________ Disease involves lipid storage, infancy, vision. EEG slow,
gen.
eyes closed= upward eye movement - ANSWERWhat is Bell's Phenomenon?
1. Sylvian epilepsy
2. 4-8 yrs
3. Stage I and Stage II
4. C3/C4 or T3/T4
5. Most will resolve - ANSWERWith Benign Rolandic Epilepsy,
1. What is another name for it?