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Comprehensive Guide to Humerus & Elbow: Surgical Anatomy, Biomechanics, & Pathologies

Which Elbow Test Is Indicated? Your Complete Exam Guide

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Which Elbow Test Is Indicated? Your Complete Exam Guide

Key Takeaway

Here are the crucial details you must know about Which Elbow Test Is Indicated? Your Complete Exam Guide. The Tennis Elbow Test assesses for contractile lesions of the wrist extensor tendons, primarily at the common extensor origin. The test is indicated when the patient experiences pain over the lateral aspect of the elbow during resisted isometric wrist extension. This helps diagnose lateral epicondylitis, a common condition causing elbow pain, often affecting men aged 40-50.

CHAPTER

ELBOW‌

A TENDON TESTS

90

Tennis elbow test 90
Golfer’s elbow test 93
B LIGAMENT/INSTABILITY TESTS

95

Valgus test 95
Varus test 97
Posterolateral pivot shift test 98
Chair push-up test 101
C NEUROLOGICAL TESTS

103

Tinel’s test 103
Pressure provocation test 105
Ulnar nerve flexion test 107
Pinch grip test 109
89

A TENDON TESTS

Tennis elbow test

Golfer’s elbow test

Valgus test

Varus test

  • Purpose

    To test the integrity of the lateral collateral ligament of the elbow.
  • Technique

    Patient position
    Standing with the elbow flexed to 20–30° and fully supinated.
    Clinician position
    Standing in front of the patient, one hand stabilizes the humerus at the elbow by gently gripping above the medial aspect of the elbow while being able to palpate the radiohumeral joint line laterally. The other hand wraps around the lateral aspect of the lower forearm.

    Fig. 3.5 ● Elbow varus test.
    Action and positive test
    A varus stress is applied to the elbow by adducting the forearm on the humerus. Tension in the ligament can often be felt as the stress is applied. Pain, excessive varus movement or loss of the normal ligamentous end-feel indicates a positive test.
  • Clinical context

    The normal valgus carrying angle at the elbow means that varus instability in isolation is not commonly encountered and is more likely to be found in posterolateral rotatory instability (see posterolateral pivot shift test, p. 98; posterolateral rotatory drawer test, p. 100; chair push-up test, p. 101). This occurs as a result of lateral collateral ligament disruption which can be associated with acute elbow dislocation, chronic instability following trauma or excessive use of the arms for weight-bearing purposes (e.g. crutch use) (O’ Driscoll 2000).

Posterolateral pivot shift test

Chair push-up test

  • Aka

    Stand-up test Chair sign
    Fig. 3.7 ● Posterolateral rotatory drawer test.
  • Purpose

    To test for posterolateral rotatory instability (PLRI) of the elbow and the integrity of the lateral collateral ligament.
  • Technique

    Patient position
    The patient sits on a chair with the hands resting on the sides of the seat or on the chair arms.
    Action and positive test
    The patient takes their weight through their arms and actively pushes up to assist the transition into a standing position. Reproduction of the pain, apprehension, clicking or locking are suggestive of lateral collateral ligament failure and PLRI instability.

    Fig. 3.8 ● Chair push-up test.
  • Clinical context

    Because PLRI diagnostic testing has not been thoroughly evaluated, using a variety of tests is more likely to direct the clinician to consider PLRI as a possible diagnosis (see posterolateral pivot shift test, p. 98; posterolateral rotatory drawer test, p. 100) (O’Driscoll 2000). The chair push-up test was evaluated in a small study of patients
    undergoing surgery for recurrent dislocation and was found to be sensitive in 87.5% of patients but, due to the absence of true negative cases, specificity could not be calculated ( Regan & Lapner 2006).
    See posterolateral pivot shift test (p. 98) for further clinical context.
  • Clinical tip

    The chair push-up test reproduces the functional movement most likely to reproduce PLRI symptoms, i.e. elbow extension and forearm supination. Anticipating the outcome, the patient is unlikely to be enthusiastic about this test and apprehension or an unwillingness to perform it are the most likely outcomes.
  • Variations

    The active floor push-up test has the patient lying prone with their hands resting flat on the floor, approximately level with their head. The patient then attempts to do a push-up using their arms only. A positive test is indicated by apprehension, dislocation or guarding as end-range extension is reached. In a small study the sensitivity of this test for PLRI was reported to be 87.5% which rose to 100% when the results of this test and the chair push-up test were combined ( Regan & Lapner 2006). This is obviously a test requiring significant upper body strength and will not, therefore, be suitable for all patients.
    C NEUROLOGICAL TESTS

Tinel’s test


Purpose

To test for compression neuropathy of the ulnar nerve at the elbow (cubital tunnel syndrome).
Technique

Patient position
The patient sits or stands.
Clinician position
The arm is taken away from the patient’s side to expose the medial aspect of the elbow to enable the clinician to identify and palpate
the ‘cord-like’ ulnar nerve just proximal to the cubital tunnel (see clinical tip), where it lies in a groove on the posterior aspect of the medial epicondyle.
Action and positive test
The area immediately proximal to the cubital tunnel is identified with palpation and then tapped using a reflex hammer a few times. A positive sign is indicated by paraesthesiae in the distribution of the ulnar nerve (little finger, ulnar half of the ring finger and the medial aspect of the hand).

Fig. 3.9 ● Tinel’s test.
Clinical context

The pathophysiology of compressive neuropathy is thought to have a bearing on the outcome of Tinel’s test, as a positive finding is usually only found in the presence of regenerating axons distal to the compression site. In the early stages of the condition, the compression has not been severe or prolonged enough to cause significant Wallerian degeneration and the test is therefore negative. In more advanced cases, Tinel’s may be negative because, after prolonged compression, there is no further axonal regeneration taking place. Tinel’s is therefore most useful in the middle stages of the condition, where some axonal recovery is underway ( Kuschner et al 2006).
In a study of 200 asymptomatic individuals, the test triggered symptoms in 36% of the population ( Kuschner et al 2006 ), confirming the propensity for false positives exposed in an earlier study ( Rayan et al 1992 ). In a small population of patients with proven cubital tunnel syndrome, Tinel’s test demonstrated 70% sensitivity and 98% specificity ( Novak et al 1994). Generally there is wide
agreement in the literature that clinical examination combined with the patient history is sufficiently sensitive and specific to diagnose cubital tunnel syndrome and may be more valuable than electrodiagnostics which, in the early stages of the condition or in mild cases, is not sufficiently sensitive or specific to detect a lesion ( Dellon 1989 , Greenwald et al 2006 , McPherson & Meals 1992 , Novak et al 1994).
TABLE 3.2 TINEL’S TEST
Author and year
|
LR +
|
LR —
|
Target condition
Novak et al 1994
| 35
★★★
| 0.3

| Ulnar nerve entrapment
Clinical tip

The cubital tunnel is formed by the bony walls of the olecranon and the medial epicondyle of the humerus. The roof is formed by the overlying fascial bands of flexor carpi ulnaris and the medial ligament of the elbow. The ulnar nerve is vulnerable as it enters, traverses and exits the tunnel.
There is no standardized method of applying Tinel’s test but the technique described above produced relatively favourable results ( Novak et al 1994 ) although the attendant problems of generating a false-positive with Tinel’s test should not be under estimated ( Gerr & Letz 1998).
The ulnar nerve is also vulnerable to compression as it passes through the tunnel of Guyon at the wrist but at this point it has only a sensory function. More proximally at the elbow, compression may compromise motor function and assessment for weakness of the muscles supplied by the nerve distal to this point (i.e. medial side of flexor digitorum profundus, flexor carpi ulnaris, the hypothenar muscles and the third and fourth lumbricals) may help to make a distinction.

Pressure provocation test

Ulnar nerve flexion test

Pinch grip test

Scientific References

    Atkins, E., Kerr, E., Goodlad, J., 2010. A Practical Approach to Orthopaedic Medicine, third ed. Churchill Livingstone, Edinburgh. Buehler, M.J., Thayer, D.T., 1988. The elbow flexion test: a clinical test for the cubital tunnel syndrome. Clin. Orthop. Relat. Res. 233, 213–216. Bulstrode, C., Buckwalter, J., Carr, A., et al., 2002. Oxford Textbook of Orthopaedics and Trauma. Oxford University Press, Oxford. Dellon, A.L., 1989. Review of treatment results for ulnar nerve entrapment at the elbow. J. Hand Surg. Am. 14 (4), 688–700. Farber, J.S., Bryan, R.S., 1968. The anterior interosseous nerve syndrome. J. Bone Joint Surg. 50, 521–523. Field, L.D., Altchek, D.W., 1996. Evaluation of the arthroscopic valgus instability test of the elbow. Am. J. Sports Med. 24 (2), 177–181. Gerr, F., Letz, R., 1998. The sensitivity and specificity of tests for carpal tunnel syndrome vary with the comparison subjects. J. Hand Surg. Br. 23 (2), 151–155. Greenfield, C., Webster, V., 2002. Chronic lateral epicondylitis: a survey of current practice in the outpatient departments in Scotland. Physiotherapy 88 (10), 578–594. Greenwald, D., Blum, L., Adams, D., et al., 2006. Effective surgical treatment of cubital tunnel syndrome based on provocative clinical testing without electrodiagnostics. Plast. Reconstr. Surg. 117 (5), 87–91. Kuschner, S.H., Ebramzadeh, E., Mitchell, S., 2006. Evaluation of elbow flexion and Tinel tests for cubital tunnel syndrome in asymptomatic individuals. Orthopaedics 29 (4), 305–308. Lee, M.L., Rosenwasser, M.P., 1999. Chronic elbow instability. Orthop. Clin. North Am. 30 (1), 81–89. Lee, G.A., Katz, S.D., Lazarus, M.D., 1998. Elbow valgus stress radiography in an uninjured population. Am. J. Sports Med. 26 (3), 425–427. McPherson, S.A., Meals, R.A., 1992. Cubital tunnel syndrome. Orthop. Clin. North Am. 23 (1), 111–123. Novak, C.B., Lee, G.W., Mackinnon, S.E., et al., 1994. Provocative testing for cubital tunnel syndrome. J. Hand Surg. 19 (5), 817–820. O’Driscoll, S.W., 2000. Classification and evaluation of recurrent instability of the elbow. Clin. Orthop. Relat. Res. 370, 34–43. O’Driscoll, S.W., Lawton, R.L., Smith, A.M., 2005. The moving valgus stress test for medial collateral ligament tears of the elbow. Am. J. Sports Med. 33 (2), 231–239. Rayan, G.M., Jensen, C., Duke, J., 1992. Elbow flexion test in the normal population. J. Hand Surg. 17 (1), 86–89. Regan, W., Lapner, P.C., 2006. Prospective evaluation of two diagnostic apprehension signs for posterolateral instability of the elbow. J. Shoulder Elbow Surg. 15 (3), 344–346. Roles, N.C., Maudsley, R.H., 1972. Radial tunnel syndrome: resistant tennis elbow as a nerve entrapment. J. Bone Joint Surg. 54 (3), 499–508. Rosati, M., Martignoni, R., Spagnolli, G., et al., 1998. Clinical validity of the elbow flexion test for the diagnosis of ulnar nerve compression at the cubital tunnel. Acta Orthop Belg 64 (4), 366–370. Standring, S., 2005. Gray’s Anatomy, thirty-ninth ed. Elsevier Churchill Livingstone, Edinburgh. Stanley, J., 2006. Radial tunnel syndrome: a surgeon’s perspective. J. Hand Ther. 19 (2), 180–185.

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