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CBIS Certified Brain Injury Specialist Exam Bank |2026/2027 | 2 Versions | Accurate Q&A + Study Guide | Expert Verified | Pass Guaranteed - A+ Graded

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Pass the CBIS (Certified Brain Injury Specialist) certification exam on your first attempt with this comprehensive exam bank for 2026/2027, featuring 2 complete versions of questions and accurate answers, plus a study guide of frequently tested topics – all expert verified and already graded A+. This A+ Graded resource for the CBIS Certification Exam (2026/2027) contains two full versions of exam questions with accurate answers, complemented by a study guide highlighting frequently tested concepts – covering every domain required for CBIS credentialing through the Brain Injury Association of America (BIAA). Featuring in-depth coverage of brain injury pathophysiology (mechanisms of injury – traumatic vs. acquired, primary and secondary injury cascades, cerebral edema, increased intracranial pressure, herniation syndromes, diffuse axonal injury, contusions, hematomas – epidural, subdural, intracerebral), neurological assessment (Glasgow Coma Scale, Rancho Los Amigos Levels of Cognitive Function, neuroimaging – CT, MRI, DTI, functional MRI), cognitive impairments (attention, memory, executive function, processing speed, social cognition, insight deficits), communication disorders (aphasia, dysarthria, apraxia, cognitive-communication deficits), physical impairments (spasticity, ataxia, hemiparesis, coordination, balance, fatigue, sleep disorders), behavioral and emotional changes (agitation, aggression, impulsivity, disinhibition, depression, anxiety, apathy, mood lability, psychosis), medical complications (seizures/post-traumatic epilepsy, hydrocephalus, heterotopic ossification, autonomic dysreflexia, neuroendocrine dysfunction, swallowing disorders, bowel/bladder dysfunction), rehabilitation principles (interdisciplinary team, goal setting, outcome measures – FIM, DRS, CRS-R), community reintegration (vocational rehabilitation, driving evaluation, supported employment, independent living skills, case management), ethical and legal issues (informed consent, capacity assessment, guardianship, advance directives, advocacy), family and caregiver support (education, coping strategies, respite care, support groups), and the CBIS Code of Ethics – it provides the complete knowledge base, clinical reasoning skills, and test-taking confidence needed to mirror the official CBIS certification exam format and rigor. Each answer is expert verified for accuracy, and the accompanying study guide prioritizes the most frequently tested topics to maximize your study efficiency. With two full practice exam versions, accurate answers, and a targeted study guide backed by our Guaranteed Pass, this is the definitive tool to earn your CBIS credential on the first attempt and advance your career in brain injury rehabilitation. Get instant access now and start studying today.

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Institución
CBIS CERTIFIED BRAIN INJURY SPECIALIST
Grado
CBIS CERTIFIED BRAIN INJURY SPECIALIST

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CBIS CERTIFIED BRAIN INJURY SPECIALIST EXAM BANK

2026/2027

2 VERSIONS OF QUESTIONS AND ACCURATE ANSWERS
WITH FREQUENTLY TESTED QUESTIONS AND STUDY GUIDE

EXPERT VERIFIED FOR GUARANTEED PASS/ALREADY GRADED A+




VERSION 1

Section 1: Neuroanatomy & Pathophysiology of Brain Injury


Q1: A patient sustains a traumatic brain injury and presents with profound personality changes,
disinhibition, and difficulty planning future actions. Which lobe of the brain is most likely
injured?

A. Parietal lobe

B. Occipital lobe

C. Frontal lobe [CORRECT]

D. Temporal lobe

Correct Answer: C

Rationale: The frontal lobe is responsible for executive functions (planning, organization) and
personality regulation (inhibition, social behavior). Damage here leads to the described
symptoms. Parietal is for sensation, Occipital for vision, Temporal for memory and hearing.
CBIS Core Content Area: Neuroanatomy.

Q2: Which structure acts as the primary relay station for sensory information (except smell) to
the cerebral cortex?

A. Hypothalamus
B. Thalamus [CORRECT]

C. Pons

D. Reticular formation

,Correct Answer: B

Rationale: The thalamus is the "relay station" of the brain. The hypothalamus regulates
autonomic and endocrine function. The pons is part of the brainstem involved in respiration and
sleep cycles. CBIS Core Content Area: Neuroanatomy.



Q3: A patient exhibits a "flaccid" paralysis on the right side of the body, indicating damage to the
upper motor neurons. Where is the lesion most likely located?

A. Peripheral nerve

B. Cerebellum

C. Motor cortex or corticospinal tract [CORRECT]

D. Dorsal root ganglion

Correct Answer: C

Rationale: Upper motor neuron lesions (cortex or spinal cord) cause spasticity or flaccidity (in
shock phase) below the level of injury. Peripheral nerve damage affects lower motor neurons.
Cerebellar damage causes ataxia, not paralysis. CBIS Core Content Area: Neuroanatomy.



Q4: Damage to the hippocampus, located in the medial temporal lobe, primarily results in which
deficit?

A. Inability to coordinate voluntary movement

B. Difficulty forming new memories (Anterograde amnesia) [CORRECT]

C. Loss of visual field (hemianopsia)

D. Inability to comprehend language

Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The hippocampus is crucial for the consolidation of short-term memory into long-
term memory. Damage leads to anterograde amnesia. CBIS Core Content Area: Neuroanatomy.

,Q5: Which part of the brain is responsible for maintaining balance and coordination?

A. Medulla oblongata

B. Cerebellum [CORRECT]

C. Corpus callosum

D. Amygdala

Correct Answer: B

Rationale: The cerebellum coordinates voluntary movement, balance, and posture. The medulla
controls vital autonomic functions. The corpus callosum connects hemispheres. The amygdala
processes emotion. CBIS Core Content Area: Neuroanatomy.



Q6: A patient who suffered a TBI presents with bitemporal hemianopsia. Where is the lesion
likely located?

A. Optic chiasm [CORRECT]

B. Left occipital lobe

C. Right optic nerve

D. Frontal eye fields

Correct Answer: A

Rationale: The optic chiasm is where fibers from the nasal retina cross. Compression here (e.g.,
by a pituitary tumor or swelling) causes loss of temporal visual fields in both eyes. CBIS Core
Content Area: Neuroanatomy.



Q7: What is the primary function of the reticular activating system (RAS)?

A. Motor control

B. Arousal and consciousness [CORRECT]

C. Temperature regulation

D. Hunger and satiety

Correct Answer: B

, Rationale: The RAS is a network of neurons in the brainstem that regulates wakefulness and
sleep-wake transitions. Damage here can result in coma. CBIS Core Content Area:
Neuroanatomy.



Q8: Which cranial nerve is responsible for pupil constriction and accommodation?

A. CN II (Optic)

B. CN III (Oculomotor) [CORRECT]

C. CN V (Trigeminal)
D. CN VII (Facial)

Correct Answer: B

Rationale: The Oculomotor nerve (CN III) controls most eye movements, including pupil
constriction via parasympathetic fibers. CBIS Core Content Area: Neuroanatomy.



Q9: In the context of TBI pathophysiology, what defines "primary injury"?

A. The biochemical cascade occurring after the initial impact

B. The neuronal damage occurring at the moment of impact [CORRECT]

C. The cerebral edema developing 24 hours post-injury

D. The hypoxic-ischemic insult resulting from low blood pressure

Correct Answer: B

Rationale: Primary injury is the direct mechanical damage (shearing, tearing, contusion)
occurring at the instant of trauma. Secondary injury evolves over time due to biochemical
processes. CBIS Core Content Area: Pathophysiology.



Q10: Which of the following is a mechanism of secondary brain injury?

A. Contusion

B. Diffuse Axonal Injury

C. Excitotoxicity [CORRECT]

D. Skull fracture

Correct Answer: C

Escuela, estudio y materia

Institución
CBIS CERTIFIED BRAIN INJURY SPECIALIST
Grado
CBIS CERTIFIED BRAIN INJURY SPECIALIST

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Subido en
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Escrito en
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