This shoulder test indicates multidirectional instability.
What is the Sulcus sign test?
Radial head fractures are the most common elbow fracture in adults. The most common complication is this.
What is elbow flexion contracture?
You can add what to the therapy process 7-10 days after an ORIF from a wrist fracture.
What is AROM?
MP +20/50, PIP -30/60, DIP 0/10 would produce this TAM.
What is 110?
This condition presents with full passive extension but limited active extension.
What is a lag, or what are weak/torn extensors?
This diagnosis encompasses an assortment of clinical entities involving the shoulder region. Vascular presentations are rare; the majority have nerve issues.
What is Thoracic Outlet Syndrome?
For 6 weeks after an elbow dislocation, this combined position should be avoided.
What is end-range elbow extension and supination?
This is the name of the test for a torn SL ligament.
What is the Watson's Test?
This functional outcome measure has 11 questions, score ranges from 0 (no disability) to 100 (completely disabled), and is a Likert Scale.
What is the Quick DASH?
This condition presents with limited finger flexion with the wrist is flexed.
What is tight extrinsic extensors?
The position of the shoulder in approximately 110 degrees of abduction and 90 degrees of ER, elbow in flexion, forearm in supination, and fingers/wrist in neutral is the position for this score of the neural mobility test?
What is 3/5?
This nerve should be closely monitored with an olecranon fracture.
That is the ulnar nerve?
This is the position needed in the fingers when exercising the wrist extensors.
What is finger flexion?
The O'Connor, Crawford, and Purdue test this skill.
What is coordination?
This condition will present with more limited IP flexion when the MPs are extended than when the MPs are flexed.
What is intrinsic tightness?
This type of fracture of the proximal humerus usually requires a hemiarthroplasty.
What is a four-part fracture?
Varus instability can be caused by insufficiency of this ligament.
What is the lateral collateral ligament?
This is the fracture of the radial styloid.
What is a chauffeur fracture?
This test involves measuring the grip strength at each position of the dynamometer.
What is the five-level grip test?
This structure is limited (stiff) if AROM is the same as PROM (both limited) regardless of the position of proximal joints.
What is joint stiffness?
The Patte test implicates this muscle.
What is the infraspinatus?
This is a picture of what specific orthosis.
What is a static progressive eblow flexion orthosis?
This is the direction the lunate wants to take with an SL tear.
What is dorsal extension? (DISI)
These are the six areas to assess for wounds.
What are the size, depth, odor, drainage, temperature, and color?
Problems with this structure present when AROM is painful and PROM is not.
What is muscle or tendon?