EEG BOARD PROFESSIONAL ASSESSMENT
TEST 2026 181 COMPLETE QUESTIONS AND
100 PERCENT VERIFIED CORRECT
ANSWERS GRADED A+ PREMIUM
PREPARATION RESOURCE
⩥ sleep activation. Answer: What activation is useful for detecting
benign rolandic epilepsy?
⩥ Anterior Cerebral Artery. Answer: Which artery supplies the frontal
pole and mesial cortex of frontal/parietal lobes?
⩥ CN VIII (Vestibulocochlear). Answer: Which nerve is affected with
neurofibromatosis/Von Recklinhausen's?
⩥ ACTH (Adrenocorticotropic hormone). Answer: What 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. Answer: What pattern would you expect after a CVA?
⩥ frontal; contralateral. Answer: Adversive seizures are from the
________ lobe with a __________ focus
⩥ Neck rotation and conjugate gaze deviation in direction contralateral
to epileptic focus. Answer: What does the body do during an adversive
seizure?
⩥ parietal. Answer: Agraphia 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. Answer: What EEG changes might
you see with alcohol withdrawal?
⩥ voltage/alpha diminish, theta then delta intrude w/ sharps,
asymmetries may develop, less sleep signs. Answer: What EEG changes
would you see w/ Alzheimer's?
,⩥ amoxycillin. Answer: Which anti-biotic can cause seizures which are
unresponsive to AED's?
⩥ Ampere. Answer: What is the unit of current?
⩥ olfactory; gustatory. Answer: Amygdalar temp lobe sz can have
___________ and ________ hallucinations
⩥ generalized slowing (hypoxia). Answer: ALS 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. Answer: Antihistamines commonly cause what
changes in the EEG at the therapeutic levels?
⩥ Antipsychotic drugs. Answer: Chlorpromazine (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. Answer: Where is the aqueduct
of sylvius located?
⩥ Area 6. Answer: Which Brodmann's area is the premotor area?
⩥ Area 17. Answer: Which Brodmann's area is the primary visual area
(most forms walls of deep calcarine sulcus)?
⩥ Area 18 and Area 19. Answer: Which two Brodmann's area is the
visual association areas?
⩥ Area 41. Answer: Which 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
TEST 2026 181 COMPLETE QUESTIONS AND
100 PERCENT VERIFIED CORRECT
ANSWERS GRADED A+ PREMIUM
PREPARATION RESOURCE
⩥ sleep activation. Answer: What activation is useful for detecting
benign rolandic epilepsy?
⩥ Anterior Cerebral Artery. Answer: Which artery supplies the frontal
pole and mesial cortex of frontal/parietal lobes?
⩥ CN VIII (Vestibulocochlear). Answer: Which nerve is affected with
neurofibromatosis/Von Recklinhausen's?
⩥ ACTH (Adrenocorticotropic hormone). Answer: What 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. Answer: What pattern would you expect after a CVA?
⩥ frontal; contralateral. Answer: Adversive seizures are from the
________ lobe with a __________ focus
⩥ Neck rotation and conjugate gaze deviation in direction contralateral
to epileptic focus. Answer: What does the body do during an adversive
seizure?
⩥ parietal. Answer: Agraphia 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. Answer: What EEG changes might
you see with alcohol withdrawal?
⩥ voltage/alpha diminish, theta then delta intrude w/ sharps,
asymmetries may develop, less sleep signs. Answer: What EEG changes
would you see w/ Alzheimer's?
,⩥ amoxycillin. Answer: Which anti-biotic can cause seizures which are
unresponsive to AED's?
⩥ Ampere. Answer: What is the unit of current?
⩥ olfactory; gustatory. Answer: Amygdalar temp lobe sz can have
___________ and ________ hallucinations
⩥ generalized slowing (hypoxia). Answer: ALS 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. Answer: Antihistamines commonly cause what
changes in the EEG at the therapeutic levels?
⩥ Antipsychotic drugs. Answer: Chlorpromazine (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. Answer: Where is the aqueduct
of sylvius located?
⩥ Area 6. Answer: Which Brodmann's area is the premotor area?
⩥ Area 17. Answer: Which Brodmann's area is the primary visual area
(most forms walls of deep calcarine sulcus)?
⩥ Area 18 and Area 19. Answer: Which two Brodmann's area is the
visual association areas?
⩥ Area 41. Answer: Which 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