Perception | Musculoskeletal, Neurological, Vision, Hearing | Q&A | Grade A
| 100% Correct (Verified Answers)
COMPREHENSIVE REVIEW | LATEST 2026/2027
SUBJECT SOURCE FORMAT
Mobility & Sensory Perception NUR 210 Exam 2 2026/2027 Q&A with Clinical Rationale
1
What does mobility require?
CORRECT ANSWER: Musculoskeletal system + nervous system working together
CLINICAL RATIONALE
1. Bones, muscles, joints, and nerves must coordinate for purposeful movement.
2. Disruption in either system impairs mobility.
2
What does mobility depend on?
CORRECT ANSWER: Proper alignment and posture, balance (wide base of support, low center of gravity),
coordinated muscle movement
CLINICAL RATIONALE
1. Balance requires proprioception and vestibular function.
3
What are the two components of sensory perception?
CORRECT ANSWER: Reception (receiving stimuli) and Perception (interpreting stimuli)
CLINICAL RATIONALE
1. Both intact receptors and proper brain function are needed for sensory perception.
4
What are the requirements for sensory experience?
CORRECT ANSWER: Stimulus, Receptor, Nervous pathway, Functioning brain
CLINICAL RATIONALE
1. Any disruption in these components causes sensory deficits.
, 5
What are mobility risk factors?
CORRECT ANSWER: Advanced age, acute illness/injury, chronic conditions, musculoskeletal trauma, CNS
disorders, fatigue and stress, mental health issues
6
What are sensory risk factors?
CORRECT ANSWER: Aging (vision/hearing loss), neurologic disorders, medication (ototoxic drugs),
environmental factors (noise, overstimulation)
7
What are consequences of mobility impairment?
CORRECT ANSWER: Muscle atrophy, contractures, pressure injuries, DVT, decreased independence
CLINICAL RATIONALE
1. Immobility leads to multisystem complications.
8
What are consequences of sensory impairment?
CORRECT ANSWER: Injury risk, isolation, communication issues, decreased awareness of environment
9
What is mobility subjective data?
CORRECT ANSWER: Activity level, endurance, pain (most common symptom), limitations in movement
10
What is sensory subjective data?
CORRECT ANSWER: Vision changes (blurred, floaters), hearing changes (tinnitus, difficulty hearing),
paresthesia (burning, tingling, numbness)
11
What is mobility objective data?
CORRECT ANSWER: Gait and posture, range of motion (ROM), muscle strength/tone, endurance