Introduction
- Introduce self
- Confirm patient identity and obtain consent
- Expose patient down to waist
- Observe patient whilst undressing
- Comment whilst patient is undressing
- Stand near examiners
Look
Clues
- Splint
- Sling
General Inspection
- General comments
- Evidence of systemic disease
- eg. rheumatoid, Cushingoid
- Frailty
- Body habitus
- Evidence of systemic disease
Anterior Aspect
- Skin
- scars, sinuses, swelling
- Pigmentation, ecchymosis, erythema
- Symmetry
- Bone
- Clavicle, Sternoclavicular Joint (SCJ), Acromioclavicular joint (ACJ), Acromion, Coracoid Process
- Muscle Wasting
- Trapezius, Deltoid, Pectoral contour, Popeye deformity (more easily seen with elbow actively flexed)
- Bone
- Posture
- Arm internally rotated
- Posterior dislocation
- Arm internally rotated
- If all appears normal: “In the coronal plane…”
- This patient has no obvious signs of systemic disease
- There is no obvious skeletal deformity, muscle atrophy or asymmetry.
- There are no scars , swellings or skin changes.
Lateral Aspect
Ask the patient to turn 90º
- Muscle Wasting
- Deltoid, Biceps, triceps
- Spinal posture
- Cervical/Thoracic/Lumbar
- Eg. Exaggerated kyphosis of thoracic spine
- Cervical/Thoracic/Lumbar
Posterior Aspect
Ask the patient to turn another 90º
- Skin
- Bone
- Scapula
- Height
- Rotation
- Winging of scapula
- Lateral scapular slide
- Soft tissue contracture draws the dominant arm scapular away from midline, common in throwing athletes
- ↑ 1.5cm correlates with posterior shoulder pain & anterior impingement syndrome
- Sprengel’s deformity
- Congenital malformation
- scapula is smaller & carried higher than on the uninvolved side
- Spine
- Scoliosis
- Scapula
- Muscle Wasting
- Trapezius
- Atrophy of supra / infraspinatus fossae
- supraspinatus
- infraspinatus
- Triceps
“There are no obvious skin changes,
there is normal symmetrical scapular contours
no wasting in the supraspinatus or infraspinatus fossae”
Feel
- Ask patient “where is it painful ?”
- Stand to side of patient at 45°, so as to face patient & examiner
- Look at patients face whilst palpating
- “Could you please point with one finger to where it hurts the most.”
- I’m going to feel around your shoulder, please let me know when it hurts.
Anterior
- Skin
- Warmth
- inflammation rarely influences skin temperature, as the joint is well covered
- Warmth
- Bony prominences
- SC joint
- Clavicle
- AC joint
- chronically enlarged AC joint
- painless osteophytes
- painful ACJ arthritis
- if you can’t find ACJ
- pushing down on clavicle & look for motion
- chronically enlarged AC joint
- Acromion
- os acrominale is painful in overuse or trauma
- usually non tender
- os acrominale is painful in overuse or trauma
- Cuff defect
- Subacromial bursa
- tenderness just anterior to acromion
- Subacromial bursitis, R/C impingement or tear
- passively extend patient’s shoulder brings the subacromial bursa anterior to acromion & ↑ ease of palpation
- passively forward flex shoulder & see if it ↑ pain
- tenderness just anterior to acromion
- Anterior capsule
- Long head biceps tendon / bicipital groove
- IR shoulder 10 deg
- groove then faces anteriorly
- Palpate 1 to 4cm distal to anterior acromion
- Painful
- Biceps tendinopathy
Posterior Aspect
- Spine of scapulae
- supraspinous fossa
- ganglion
- Osteochondroma
- Muscle mass
- infraspinous fossa
- Medial aspect of scapulae
- Osteochondroma / bursitis
Move
From Front
- 1. Abduction
- 2. Forward Flexion
- 3. Adduction
- 4. External Rotation
From Behind
- 5. Internal Rotation
- 6. Scapulothoracic motion if Abduction abnormal
STAND IN FRONT OF PATIENT, TEST BOTH ARMS AT SAME TIME
- 1. Active
- 2. Passive
- if Active is restricted
- stop immediately if painful
- 3. Power (MRC grading)
Lateral Elevation | Abduction 0–160/180°
- Note glenohumeral & scapulothoracic
- Put hand on shoulder to stabilise shoulder
- Note ROM
- Active then Passive
- Active
- elevate both arms in coronal plane
- comment on
- 1. Initiation
- 2. scapulohumeral rhythm
- Scapula moving too early & creating a shrugging effect (R/C path, Glenohumeral Osteoarthritis)
- 60° Scapulothoracic, 120° GHJ
- non-linear relationship between GHJ and scapular contribution
- 3. painful arc syndrome (impinged or torn RC)
- Pain in midrange of abduction suggests minor rotator cuff tear or supraspinatus tendonitis
- Ask if any pain during this movement
- Can’t watch face from behind!
- Pain in midrange of abduction suggests minor rotator cuff tear or supraspinatus tendonitis
- 4. Pain at the end of abduction (AC arthritis)
- 5. range (160°-180°)
- Passive (if active not restricted due to pain)
- if not full, passive to 180° comment on
- active vs passive
- Warn patient about movement
- Hold patients shoulder & elbow
- If passive is more than active
- ? R/C pathology
- If passive is more than active
- if not full, passive to 180° comment on
- Observe arm lowering comment on
- arc of pain
- drop arm
- Active
Forward Flexion 160-180°
- Active
- both arms raised forward
- comment on
- NEER’s Impingement
- range
- ability (trick movements)
- check contour of axilla
- Pathology
- ↓ in arthritis, adhesive capsulitis, R/C tears
- R/C impingement limits abduction more than forward flexion
- ↑ passive over active – R/C pathology, weakness of scapular stabilizers
Adduction (Horizontal flexion)
- Adduction by cross body/cross chest adduction
- Forward flex shoulder to 90deg
- Try to touch opposite shoulder
- Measure the distance from the cubital fossa to opposite acromion
- Normal: cup hand over other shoulder at least, often more
- ↓ in ACJ pathology
- Option
- Adduction by swinging extended arm across body (30deg)
External Rotation 45 – 90°
- Active with shoulder adducted
- elbows flexed to 90° & arms by side
- start with arms forward
- rotate arms outwards (90°)
Passive
- if not full, passive
Option
- Active with shoulder abducted 90°
- do not do this if patient had pain on abduction!
- arms abducted to 90° & elbows flexed 90°
- external rotation (90°)
- internal rotation (90°)
- usually 20° greater in dominant arm
- Watch for compensatory arching of back
- In this position, it may be falsely limited in patients at risk of involuntary subluxation, dislocation
- ↓ ER – massive R/C tear
- in massive R/C tears, passive motion with ↑ ROM but patients arm will drift back on letting go
FROM BEHIND PATIENT
Internal Rotation
- Apley Scratch Test (T7 for women, T9 for men)
- Reach behind your back & run your thumbs over the middle of your spine
- Mark with your index finger & compare to contralateral side
- superior angle of scapula (T2)
- blade of scapula (T4)
- inferior angle of scapula (T7)
- Iliac crests – L4-5 interspace
- Abdomen, greater trochanter, PSIS, sacrum
- This movement also requires extension but is a very functional measurement
- 2 levels higher in non-dominant hand
- IR is the first motion lost in adhesive capsulitis (last to come back)
- Options
- IR in 90° abduction (30-45deg)
- You can also test by asking patient to
- Hands behind head: ER in abduction
- Hands up back IR in adduction
Scapulothoracic Motion
- Perform if abduction abnormal
- Stabilize shoulder & move passively
Special Tests
- order of special tests depends on your clinical suspicion
- For example
- If elderly
- Impingement
- I noted on movement he had a positive / negative Neer’s Impingement Sign & Drop arm sign
- Hawkins Test
- Is also positive
- Rotator cuff
- Supraspinatus: Jobe
- (feel muscle, +ve , 5/5)
- Infraspinatus / teres minor: resisted ER test
- Subscapularis: Belly press & Lift off test
- Supraspinatus: Jobe
- AC joint
- Cross Chest compression
- Biceps
- Speeds
- Yergasons
- Impingement
- If young
- do stability testing first
- Quantitative
- Sitting
- Sulcus
- Anterior & posterior draw
- Sitting
- Provocative
- Sitting
- Posterior
- Jerk
- Anterior
- Apprehension
- Relocation
- Release
- Posterior
- Sitting
- Generalised Ligamentus Laxity
- Quantitative
- Slap
- O’ Brien’s Test
- do stability testing first
- If elderly
Impingement / Rotator Cuff
- Findings
- Tenderness of subacromial bursa
- Painful arc of abduction
- Pain on abduction between 60-100°, maximal at 90°
- Pain ↑ with resistance at 90°
- Patients sometimes ER to clear GT under acromion (diminishing pain & allowing greater elevation in the coronal plane)
- Abnormal scapulohumeral rhythm during abduction
- Weak suprspinatus muscle-tendon unit
- Weak infraspinatus muscle-tendon unit
- Already performed
- Neer’s
- Drop arm
- To Perform
- Hawkin’s
- Impingement
Hawkins Impingement Reinforcement Test
- FF shoulder to 90°
- Elbow at 90° (thus pt’s forearm is in front of body)
- Passively IR shoulder
- Drives GT & R/C into acromion & CA ligament
Neer’s Impingement Sign
- FF flex shoulder whilst examiner’s hand on pt’s shoulder (scapula stabilized)
- Look for reproduction of pt’s symptoms at maximum FF
- It brings the AL acromion into contact with the affected R/C & GT
Neer’s impingement test
- Inject LA (10 cc of 1% xylocaine)
Drop-arm Test
- If pt’s passive ROM is much greater than active ROM – perform this test
- Passively abduct arm to maximum amount
- Warn the patient that you are about the let go
- Ask patient to slowly lower arm
- Positive Sign if
- At 100°, the patient is unable to control arm & arm drops to side
- Caused by pain of R/C tear & axillary nerve palsy
- Inject with LA
- If it improves, more likely due to pain
- At 100°, the patient is unable to control arm & arm drops to side
- Positive Sign if
- Cause
- Massive cuff tear
- Axillary nerve palsy
- Neuromuscular impairment
Rotator Cuff
- Test pain & grade power
- Feel muscle belly & comment on
- Presence of contraction
- Stength 1-5
- 1. Supraspinatus: Jobe
- 2. Infraspinatus & Teres Minor: Resisted ER
- 3. Subscapularis: Belly press test & lift off test
Supraspinatus (Suprascapula nerve)
- Supraspinatus isolation test (Jobe test)
- Abducted 90°
- 30° anterior to coronal plane
- elbows fully extended
- thumb pointing downwards
- patient pushes up towards ceiling against resistance
- Differential Diagnosis
- 50% of power at this position is from supraspinatus
- Deltoid dysfunction
- OA
Infraspinatus (Suprascapula nerve) / Teres Minor (axillary nerve)
1. Resisted external rotation
- elbows flexed to 90°
- arm by the side
- Feel for muscle
- Teres minor is tested with infraspinatus
- Teres minor is only involved in massive rotator cuff tears
- Teres minor is tested with infraspinatus
- If weak, perform
- Dropping sign
- Irreparable degeneration of infraspinatus
- Hornblower’s sign
- irreparable tear of infraspinatus & teres minor
- Dropping sign
2. Dropping sign
- 0° of abduction, forearm is placed in 45 deg of external rotation
- Pt asked to externally rotate against examiner’s hand
- If the patients arm falls back to 0° of ER, than +ve test
- 100% sensitivity & 100% specificity for irreparable degeneration of the infraspinatus
3. Hornblower’s sign
- Power of external rotation in 90° of abduction in the scapular plane
- Examiner places the patients elbow at 90 deg flexion with maximal ER
- Examiner’s other hand is used to judge external rotation force
- When the examiner’s hand is released a positive test is recorded if the patient is unable to externally rotate
- 100% sensitivity & 93% specificity for irreparable tear of infraspinatus & teres minor
- “dropping” & “hornblower’s” signs in evaluation of rotator cuff tears.
Subscapularis (Upper & Lower subscapular nerves)
1. Belly Press Test
- Described in Gerber’s 1996 article
- Patients with R/C pathology usually cannot do lift off test because of ROM
- Resisted Internal Rotation with hand on belly
- Must keep elbow forward
I’m going to hold onto your elbow
Could you now try to “Press your wrist into your belly”
- Negative
- Elbow forward
- Pt uses subscap to internally rotate arm to press belly
- Positive
- Pt compensates for lack of subscapularis
- Extending shoulder
- Pt compensates for lack of subscapularis
2. Gerber subscapularis lift off test
- Christian Gerber in JBJS(B) 1991
- “Pathological lift off test – patient is unable to lift the dorsum of his hand off his back”
- Put dorsum of patients hand on buttock then lift it off buttock & let go
- Gerber’s test is normal if patient can hold hand off buttock
- Pt must have full IR & not be limited by pain to use this test
- other feature that Gerber described was ↑ passive ER with indistinct endpoint
AC Joint
- 1. Localized crepitus over AC joint
- 2. Passive Cross-chest adduction
- 3. AC injection with LA
- 4. O’Brien test
1. Crossed chest adduction test
- Passive FF to 90 & adduction
- Pt places hand behind back & examiner extends shoulder further, lifting forearm off back
- Places rotational stress at AC joint
2. O’Brien Test
- Stephen O’Brien Am J Sports Medicine 1998
- Step 1
- Elbow straight
- FF shoulder to 90°
- 15° towards midline
- IR arm until thumb points downward
- Apply downward force whilst patient resists it
- Note presence & location of pain
- Step 2
- Palm now faces forward
- Apply downward force whilst patient resists it
- Positive if
- Pain only during step 1
- Pain at top of shoulder is AC joint
- Pain deep in shoulder is injury to glenoid labrum
Biceps Tendon
Tendinitis
- Localised tenderness
- Speed Test
- Yergason’s test
Speed Test
- FF 90 deg, elbow extended, palms pointing towards the ceiling
- Push down on wrists & patient resists
- Positive if patient complains of pain
- Assess pain or popping at bicipital groove (long head of biceps)
Yergason’s Test
- Arm by the side, elbow flexed 90 deg, pronate forearm
- Shake patient’s hand
- Ask patient to try to flex & supinate forearm
- Positive if patient complains of pain in anterior aspect of shoulder
Stability
Biceps Instability Test
- Instability of long head of biceps in intertubercular groove
- Associated with R/C tear
- Stop sign position: abduction 90°, elbow flexed, ER shoulder
- Feel for bicipital groove
- IR shoulder
- palpable or audible click & pain as biceps tendon reduces & then subluxates passing over the lesser tuberosity
Stability Testing
- Anterior Instability
- Sitting (on edge of couch)
- Quantitative laxity tests
- Sulcus
- AP drawer
- Load & shift
- Provocative
- Jerk
- Quantitative laxity tests
- Lying
- Provocative tests
- Apprehension
- Relocation
- Release
- Provocative tests
- Sitting (on edge of couch)
Quantitative Tests of Laxity
- Test for amount of laxity
1. Sulcus Sign
- Pt sitting
- This is testing for inferior instability
- needs to be compared to the opposite side
- in front of patient
- hands in lap
- pull down on elbow, other hand gripping acromion to stabilize it
- one at a time
- look for sulcus between lateral edge of acromion & humeral head
Grade | Distance |
---|---|
1 | 1 cm |
2 | 1-2 cm |
3 | > 2 cm |
- Suggestive of multidirectional instability
- Performing this test with arm adducted stresses the superior glenohumeral ligament & rotator interval
- Performing this test with the arm abducted 90° stresses the IGHL.
- If there is inferior translation without symptoms the patient has inferior laxity; if there are symptoms the patient has inferior instability
2. Drawer Test – anterior & posterior
- Always examine other shoulder first
- Stabilise scapula with other hand (grip Acromion)
- Grasp proximal humerus with thumb & index finger
- Push anteriorly & posteriorly
- Normal
- 25% anteriorly
- 50% posteriorly
- But compare with other side
3. Cofield’s Stability Tests (glenohumeral ligament)
- Glenohumeral ligament is tightened with progressive ER
- Anterior & posterior draw performed with varying degrees ER
- Supine
4. Load & Shift Test
- Similar to Drawer test but shoulder is mildly abducted
- Pt is at edge of table so that shoulder hangs off it & the table then acts to counteract applied forces
- Tuck the pt’s hand into your arm pit, thus freeing both hands to manipulate the shoulder
- Vary the amounts of abduction to find the most laxity
- A compressive force is delivered to the humeral head to reduce it into the glenoid. The arm is positioned in 20° of abduction, 20° of forward flexion & neutral rotation. Anterior & posterior forces are then placed on the proximal humerus & direction & degree of translation are determined.
Grade | Description |
---|---|
1 | head translation up to the glenoid rim that is greater than the other side |
2 | head translates over the glenoid rim but spontaneously reduces when the force is removed |
3 | humeral head translation over the glenoid rim which remains locked when the force is removed |
Provocative Tests
Posterior Instability – Patient Sitting
1. Jerk Test / Posterior stress test
- Arm is at 90° forward flexion & flexed at the elbow to 90°
- A pressure is applied posteriorly to translate the shoulder back, then the arm is brought around to abduction & the shoulder relocated
- scapula is stabilized with the other hand during this manouver.
- Positive if apprehension or Jerk felt
- patient experiences pain +/- apprehension
- unlike anterior test patient has +ve test if pain only
- should reproduce the patients symptoms
2. Passive Circumduction Adduction Manoeuvre
- Standing position
- Stand behind patient
- Hand to stabilize shoulder & feel for subluxation
- Elbow extended, move arm to extended & slightly abducted postion
- Then passively move patient’s arm in circle movement moving backwards & upwards
- At the top of circle, move arm to front of patient into flexed & adducted position
- Posterior dislocation occurs when shoulder is forward flexed & adducted
Posterior Instability – Patient Sitting
1. Apprehension Test
- Ask patient to relax
- Take it slow & ask patient to say when it hurts etc
- Abduct shoulder to 90°
- Elbow flexed to 90°
- Examiner then ER arm
- Positive if
- Pt reacts by expressing concern or anxiety
- look for apprehension (pain not reliable indicator)
2. Relocation (Jobe Relocation Test)
- Push posteriorly on the anterior aspect of proximal humerus
- This should relieve the patients symptoms
3. Release
- By releasing or easing the posteriorly directed pressure the patient’s apprehension should return
Other options
4. Crank Test
- Similar to apprehension test, but in upright position
- Examiner’s thumb pushes on posterior shoulder to apply anterior leverage
- index & middle fingers are positioned on anterior shoulder to prevent against sudden dislocation
LIGAMENTOUS LAXITY (Wynne-Davies Criteria)
- Thumb touching forearm on flexing wrist
- Fingers parallel to forearm with wrist extension
- Elbows extend past 180°
- Knees extend past 180°
- Foot dorsiflex past 45°
“If 3 of the 5 pairs of joints examined in any one individual showed this degree of laxity it is taken as positive.”
SLAP Lesions
- Sitting
O’Brien Test
Step 1
- Elbow straight
- FF shoulder to 90 deg
- 15 deg towards midline
- IR arm until thumb points downward
- Apply downward force whilst patient resists it
- Note presence & location of pain
Step 2
- Palm now faces forward
- Apply downward force whilst patient resists it
Positive if:
- Pain only during step 1
- Pain at top of shoulder is AC joint
- Pain deep in shoulder is injury to glenoid labrum
- Supine
Compression-Rotation test (McMurray’s Shoulder test)
- Shoulder ABD 90°
- Elbow Flexed 90°
- Compression force to humerus
- Humerus rotated
- Attempt to trap torn labrum
- +ve if pain & click
Other Muscles
Looking from Back
Scapula Stabilizers
- Serratus Anterior Long thoracic nerve
- 1. Winging
- 2. “Wall push off test
- modified pushup against the wall
- if subtle, get patient to perform pushup with the arms at various heights above & below shoulder level
- 3. Shoulder protraction against examiners hand
- Rhomboids Dorsal scapula nerve
- “pull the shoulders back”
- palpate muscles
- rare injury to nerve produces milder winging
- Trapezius Cranial nerve X1- spinal accessory nerve
- Weakness of trapezius causes a more lateral scapula & winging
- “shrug shoulders”
- palpate muscle
- Nerve injured in surgical procedures like dissection of posterior cervical lymph nodes
- Deltoid (axillary nerve)
- Test anterior, middle & posterior fibers independently
- arm by side
- resisted elevation
- Looking from Side
- Anterior fibres: Forward flexion against resistance
- Posterior fibres: Extension against resistance
- Latissimus Dorsi (thoracodorsal nerve)
- Climbing a ladder action – patient starts with arm 90° flexion & elbow flexed, then tries to extend the shoulder against resistance
Looking from Front
- Pectoral Major (medial & lateral pectoral nerves)
- Press hands together in front of body
- To test strength, one hand at a time against examiners hand
Sensation Testing
- Axillary Nerve
- Shoulder patch
- Musculocutaneous Nerve
- Becomes lateral antebrachial cutaneous nerve
- Lateral side of forearm
- Becomes lateral antebrachial cutaneous nerve
Thoracic Outlet Syndrome
Compression of neurovascular structures above the first rib
1. Adson’s Test
- Shoulder abducted 30° & maximally extended, neck facing away
- Feel for quality of radial pulse
- Pt inhales deeply
- Positive if less than when shoulder is in neutral position
2. Wright’s Test
- Similar to Adson’s Test
- But arm is abducted 90° & fully ER
3. Roos Test
- Shoulder abducted 90 deg, elbow flexed 90 deg
- Pt open & closes hand 15times
- Positive if numbness, cramping, weakness or inability to complete procedure
4. Halstead’s Test
- Patient is standing
- Arm by the side, feel the pulse
- Patient then turns head away & extends neck
- Examiner then pulls on arm
- Positive if pulse is obliterated
5. Hyperabduction Test
- Feel both radial pulses
- Pt then abducts both armsfully
- Positive if pulse is reduce
Snapping Scapular Syndrome
- retract & protract scapular
- produces a palpable & often audible grating
- feel at supramedial corner of scapula
OTHER
CEPHALAD JOINT – NECK
- 1. ROM
- 2. Tenderness
- 3. Compression Test
- Slight extension
- Compression
- 4. Spurling’s test
- Neck in lateral flexion, rotation
- Stressed with compression
- Positive if pain in ipsilateral extremity