Term
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Definition
| Appear in a diseased state which are not only manifestations of disease, but contribute to maintenance of the diseased state. |
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Term
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Definition
When normal adaptability is disrupted,
Environmental changes over come body's capacity for self-maintenance.
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Term
4 tenets of osteopathic philosophy
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Definition
1. Body is a unit
2. Body possesses self-regulatory, self-healing, and helath maintenance mechanisms.
3. Structure and function are reciprocally interrlated.
4. Rational therapy is based on an understanding of body unity, self-regulation and interrelationship of structure and function. |
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Term
| What year did the california merger occur? |
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Definition
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Term
| Examples and years of Desegregation |
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Definition
1967- DOs in armed forces
1967-AMA removes cult label
1969-AMA accepts DOs as members
1969-AMA encourages ACGME residencies to train DOs |
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Term
| During what years were the addition of medications added? |
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Definition
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Term
| What year was the 1st approval of residency training for DOs? |
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Definition
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Term
| What year did the AOA Policy add "seperate and equal" stance? |
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Definition
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Term
| What year ws the 1st DO appointed medical officer? |
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Definition
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Term
| What year did DOs obtain full practice rights in all 50 states? |
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Definition
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Term
| Who was the founder of Chicago School of Osteopathy, which was treated by AT still and Graduated from ASO in 1900? |
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Definition
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Term
1. What year was the AOA founded?
2. What year did Vermont first recognize Osteopathy?
3. What year was the first recorded Osteopathic research?
4. What year did the adoption of standard for colleges occur?
5. When was the first inspeciton of osteopathic colleges? |
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Definition
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Term
What year was the flexner report?
What years were the Spanich flu pandemic? |
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Definition
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Term
What was the name of the first osteopathic school?
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Definition
| American School of Osteopathy |
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Term
| In what city and state did the first school arise? |
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Definition
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Term
| Who was the founder of Chiropractic? |
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Definition
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Term
| What year was the first chiropractic adjustment? |
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Definition
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Term
| According to the osteopathic philosophy of health how does a healthy state exist? |
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Definition
| Normal flow of body fluids and nerve activity. |
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Term
| Which state and city rejected new osteopathic philosophy and in what year? |
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Definition
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Term
| The governor of what city and state was treated with OmT? |
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Definition
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Term
| What year did AT Still flung to the breeze the banner of osteopathy? |
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Definition
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Term
| What year was AT STill born? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
| Who were Dr. James Paget and Dr. Wharton Hood? |
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Definition
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Term
| Who are the Sweet family? |
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Definition
| Family of New england Bonesetters, 1830s migrated northeast, in 1850s migrated into the west. |
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Term
| Who developed Hydrotherapy and imported it to the states in 1840s? |
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Definition
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Term
| Who founded mesmerism? What does it entail? |
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Definition
| Franz Mesmer, magnets and iron curing disease. Animal magnetism. |
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Term
| Who coined the term allopaths and what does it mean? |
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Definition
| Samuel Hahnemann, its original meaning was to describe homeopathy where like cures like. |
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Term
| Who was Sylvester Graham? |
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Definition
Spoke against:
Gluttony
Improper dress
Sexual permissiveness
Medicines
Founder of Graham crackers to suppress sexual urges. Prespetirian minister. |
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Term
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Definition
Signer of the declaration of independence,
all disease due to physiologic tension.
Founded Blood letting. |
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Term
| When did William Beaumont publish his experiment? What was it about? |
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Definition
| 1833, experimented on gastric digestion and response to foods and emotion from a patient with a gunshot wound in abdomen "father of gastric physiology" |
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Term
Dr. Thomas brown MD 1828
Dr. John Hilton MD-1863 |
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Definition
Spinal irritation; pain in organ may be caused due to disturbed spinal vertebrae
Sympathies; Treatment of visceral by resting the spine |
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Term
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Definition
| Father of modern pathology, 1858 |
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Term
Who discovered RBCs?
What year? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
| Who discovers vaccination from small pox? What year? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
| Discovers function of individual spinal nerves, diffirentiation b/w sensory and motor function. 1811 |
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Term
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Definition
| 1628, Describes circulation by the heart as a closed system |
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Term
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Definition
| Greek goddess of giver of health, disease prevention |
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Term
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Definition
| Power of healing through herbs |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Staff of Hermes (Mercury)
God of commerce, eloquence, invention, travel, theft |
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Term
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Definition
| Focuses on disease or symptoms |
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Term
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Definition
| Now used as alternative medicine, mentioned in the Vedas. |
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Term
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Definition
| Somatic components which Osteopathic physicians look for and treat |
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Term
| What do DOs use when dx somatic dysfunction? |
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Definition
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Term
When is medical and surgical options successful?
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Definition
| When disease is overpowering host. |
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Term
| What would be tx when Host and Disease are equal? |
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Definition
| Medical care and OMT to enable pt to realize their health potential. |
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Term
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Definition
| Therapeutic application of manually guided forces by a DO to improve physiologic function and or support homeostasis. |
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Term
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Definition
| To restore homeostasis utilizing concepts of the unity of the living organisms structure and function and using the art of medicine and surgery in all of its branches and specialties. |
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Term
| Early techniques used (OMT) |
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Definition
Generalized
Specific
Direct
indirect
articular
soft tissue
lymphatics |
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Term
| What did the second wave of techniques include? |
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Definition
Strap technique
Chapman's reflexes
Cranial concepts
Post-isometric relaxation |
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Term
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Definition
| Director of AT STill research institute 1917-1935, Research laboratory in Pasadena, Professor at college of Osteo. in L.A., CA |
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Term
| What research did Louisa Burns demonstrate? |
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Definition
| Somatovisceral and viscerosomatic relationships, organized 2nd national data collection study of a specific pt population. |
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Term
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Definition
Researcher, Developed standard terminology
Texture changes, altered quality or quantity of motion, asymmetry of structure, tenderness, and temp. changes. |
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Term
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Definition
Summarized by William Johnston, represents standard terminology presented by Dr. Denslow.
Tissue texture changes
Altered quality or quantity of motion
Asymmetry of structure
Tenderness
Temp. Changes |
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Term
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Definition
Developed "facilitated segment" concept, trauma to muscles will send afferent signals to dorsal horn of spine and alter firing thresholds and excitability of interconnecting neurons.
"The second great philosopher of osteopathic medicine" |
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Term
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Definition
| Validation of palpatory motion tests. |
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