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CCSP Shoulder Review. Analyzing and Diagnosing Shoulder injuries for Rehabilitation. Inspection: thumbs forward abduction 0-60 gleno humeral 60-120 Scapular 120-160 Impingment 160-180 Thoracic and Lumbar extension Thumbs back now extension
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Analyzing and Diagnosing Shoulder injuries for Rehabilitation • Inspection: thumbs forward abduction • 0-60 gleno humeral • 60-120 Scapular • 120-160 Impingment • 160-180 Thoracic and Lumbar extension • Thumbs back now extension • As arms go down look for speeds, SLAP, give way • Cross hands to opposite shoulder slight push down • Palm up 15 degrees biceps long head challenge • Sulcus press test • Sulcus abduction test • Cuff Challenge • Atrophy – big for cuff tears • Stability Challenge
All Rehabilitation Programs should have the following components • Stability • Manipulative • Rehabilitative • Surgical – most surgical intervention for instability • Flexibility • Of the soft tissue • Instability front need back stability • Range of motion • Global and functional range • shoulder manipulation • Little to manipulate from a subluxation position • AC, Scapular fixation • MUJA frozen shoulder • Must manipulate above and below • First rib, T3-T7, Lower CSP, opposite PSIS • Rehabilitation and Exercise
Rehabilitation Sequencing • Short Arc • Muscle integrations • Establish firing sequencing • Establish muscle segment altered firing pattern • EMG substantiate\ • Begin cat 1 • Long Arc • Complete range without subluxation • Different resistance banding load • Bow Flex • Begin cat 2 • Resistive Load • Controlled resistive load (not exercise prescription) • Do not pyramid load training • Compression loading at tendon insertions • Ballistic Loading • Torsional tendon lowing at origins
Scapular thoracic Motion /Function Scapular elevation and depression Shoulder shrugs Scapular Protraction and Retraction Motion can be distorted if performed at extremes Use a ball roll procedure (Basketball) Scapulothoracic lateral slide test Both sides are within 1 cm bilaterally
Creating your MS3805 Exam form • Designed from class • Pain assessment questions: • Referral pain patterns (5 questions) • Segmental motion assessment • Regional motion assessment • Global motion assessment • Specific strength assessment • Special Test • Idea is to lead to a specific diagnosis and a Rehabilitation program
Painful Arc Testing • Even with frozen shoulder 40 degress of abduction is possible due to scapular thoracic motion • Pain between 80-120 degrees during palm down elevation • If thumb rotates then anterior humeral axis impingement • Above and below 120/ 80 degrees the A/C joint is involved. There is more room in the supraspinatus outlet as the cuff drops away from the elevated scapulae.
Painful Arc Testing • Between 80-120 degrees • The supraspinatus slides under the confines of the coracoacromial ligament, AC joint, distal clavicle and acromion. • If you cannot lift in this range then usually a full thickness tear of the cuff
Painful arc above 120 degrees • If the pain is above 120 degrees then the AC joint is the problem • Arthritis • Spurring • Acromiolysis
Painful arc testing in 80-120 range • If palm up pain > than palm down, in the mid range 80-120 then exam consistent with • Adhesive capsulitis • Bursal adhesions • Posterior capsule synovitis • These structures get caught in supraspinatus fossa behind the scapular spine or between the deltoid and the rotator cuff • Remember palm down is cuff tendonitis
Objective Clinical Testing • Laxity • SLAP • Strength • AC vs impingement • TOS • Scapular winging • Cervical spine • Remember the most missed shoulder DR comes from the cervical spine
Internal Laxity Testing • Seated Internal Apprehension testing • Internal Apprehension testing • 90 degrees arm at the square • Look for apprehension • Feel for shift of the Glenohumeral head forward • Bankart, capsular avulsion • Subluxation / Dislocation out of socket • Feel for grinding (bankart)
External Laxity Testing • Seated external laxity apprehension • with the arm at the square rotate from internal to external rotation of the arm • Clicking is usually associated with a Labral tear • Posterior capsular laxity • This test is similar to doing McMurray’s test of the knee and feel for the meniscus to click
Inferior Laxity • Downward traction apprehension test • With a downward traction force you will perform a pivot shift on the inferior labrum and the inferior capsule • AP Drawer sign with hands on clavicle and acrominon • With the production of a sulcus sign, multidirectional instability • If bilaterally then inherent laxity or progressive stress causing progressive laxity • Not uncommon in swimming • If painful then must be treated
Supine Laxity Testing • Internal and external rotation with the arm flexed at 30, 60 and 90 degrees respectively • Remember 50% glenohumeral translation is considered normal • Containment maneuver • Abducted 90 degree, internal apprehension test with containment pressure makes pain go away. • Identifies the chronic subluxation shoulder
TOS and 1st rib , 3 strike testing • Wrights • Hyperabduction • Adson’s • Down and extension • Roo’s • Open and closing hand • 3 strike • Costoclavicular • Supra Clavicular space • Posterior intercostal transverse
AC vs. Impingement Testing • Forced flexion and forced hyperabduction • Implies AC joint arthritis • Press down on the AC joint with abduction of arm first 0-15 degrees advocates AC spurring and initial supraspinatus tendon compression • Palpate the coracoid tip and feel for the coracoacromial ligament • Now perform a impingement test at 90 degree of forward flexion and internal rotation • If positive, then cuff is injured
SLAP Lesion Testing • Slap Test • With arm in 90 degrees of forward flexion • Abduct the arm 30 degrees more toward the midline • Now internally rotate the arm • Pain radiating down the biceps tendon of pain from the back of the joint, • Superior labrum is detached of loose • Capsular is caught because of laxity • Test also used for posterior subluxation • Pearl • Structure at the top of the shoulder joint are loose, or worn • Does or does not have to click…use pain
Global Strength & SITS Testing • General global strength testing • Patient is seated and elbow is flexed at 90 degrees • SITS testing all 4 head and try to assess the initial loading. • If the patient has good strength then “counting strength and comparing bilateral is important • 1001, 1002, 1003, etc