Title: Physical Examination of the Elbow
1Physical Examination of the Elbow
2Components of Physical Exam
- History
- Inspection
- ROM
- Palpation
- Strength/Neurovascular
- Stability
- Special Tests
3The Athletes Elbow
- It is important to remember when examining the
elbow of any athlete or manual laborer that
adaptations to repetitive stresses induced by
sport/work activities may result in abnormal
findings which may not represent true pathology
4History
- ? Dominant hand
- What, when, where, how
- Work related
- Any previous injury
- Any previous treatment
5History
- Any Traumatic events
- Falls, dislocations, lacerations, fractures
- Recent athletic activity
- Throwing history
- When, where, how much, how well, how fast
- Changes in routine or training regimen
- Pain or instability with throwing
- 85 of throwers with medial elbow instability
complain of pain in the acceleration phase of
throwing - Neurologic symptoms with throwing
6Inspection
- Normal carrying angle in adult
- Male 10-11 degrees valgus
- Female 13 degrees valgus
- Not uncommon for throwers to have gt 15 degrees
valgus at elbow - Person with large elbow effusion will tend to
hold elbow flexed 70-80 degrees as this
corresponds to greatest volume of elbow joint
capsule
7Inspection
13 degrees Valgus
8Inspection
- Lateral recess, medial epicondyle, antecubital
fossa, olecranon tip - Prominence of the olecranon tip may indicate
posterior/posterolateral dislocation or triceps
avulsion - Ecchymosis anteriorly may indicate biceps tendon
rupture - Ecchymosis medially may indicate a fracture of
the medial epicondyle or avulsion injury
9Inspection
10Inspection
- Olecranon bursa should be insepcted
- If enlarged may represent bursitis
- Aseptic vs. septic
- Ulnar nerve subluxation may be visible
11Range of Motion
- Active followed by passive ROM
- Normal ROM in adult
- 0 140 degrees /- 10 degrees in sagittal plane
- 80-90 degrees of forearm rotation in each
direction - With progressive flexion, elbow moves into
increasing valgus
12Full Extension
Full Flexion
13Range of Motion
- Generalized ligamentous laxity is associated with
increased ROM - Distinctly uncommon in throwing athletes
- Functional ROM is 30-130 degrees flexion and 50
degrees of rotation in each direction - Morrey et al, JBJS 1981
14Range of Motion
- Loss of motion in athlete attributable to
- Capsular contracture
- Capsular strain
- Musculotendinous contracture or strain
- Loose body
- Osteophyte formation
- Scar tissue
15Range of Motion
- Pain, crepitus, and end feel must be assessed
- End feel in extension should be bony
- Soft endpoint may indicate contracture
- End feel in flexion should be soft
- Firm endpoint may indicate bony impingement
- gt 50 of throwing athletes have some degree of
elbow flexion contracture - King et al, Clin Ortho 1969
16Palpation
- Bony Palpation
- Olecranon
- Posteromedial tip (impingement)
- Proximal shaft (stress fractures)
- Epicondyles
- Fractures
- Epicondylitis
- Radial Head
- Fractures
- Dislocations
17Palpation of medial side
Palpation Posteriorly
18Lateral Side Palpation
Lateral epicondyle Radial Head Lateral
olecranon Soft spot
19Bony Impingement
- Impingement of the posteromedial tip of the
olecranon in the olecranon fossa - Pain occurs as the elbow is snapped into
extension - More common in throwing athletes
20Epicondylitis
- Medial Epicondylitis (Golfers Elbow)
- Palpate medial muslce mass/epicondyle while
resisting active pronation - Pain either within muscle belly or directly over
epicondyle - Lateral Epicondylitis (Tennis Elbow)
- Palpate mobile wad while resisting active
supination (ECRB most common offender) - Pain within muscle belly or over epicondyle
21Palpation
- Soft Tissues
- Antecubital Fossa
- Mobile wad, biceps tendon, brachial pulse
- Median nerve not generally palpable
- Medial
- Flexor-pronator mass
- Ulnar nerve
- UCL
22Biceps Tendon Rupture
- Palpation in the antecubital fossa
- Absence of typically prominent tendon
- Resisted supination will increase prominence
- /- Pain in antecubital fossa
- Ecchymosis may be present
23Ulnar Nerve Instability
- Ulnar nerve held in cubital tunnel by overlying
and investing fascia - Rupture or stretch of this tissue may lead to
subluxation of nerve - Paresthesias
- Pain with subluxation
- May have pain with palpation
- Ulnar nerve subluxes anteriorly with increasing
flexion of elbow - Nerve snaps back with rapid active extension
24Ulnar Nerve Instability
- Typically the snap back into the cubital tunnel
creates the pain or paresthetic symptoms - Compression wrap or brace may be enough to keep
nerve from subluxing - Patients with paresthesias may require elective
ulnar nerve transfer
25Ulnar Nerve Impingement
- Anomalous bands of triceps insertion may impinge
ulnar nerve as they snap over medial epicondyle - Sensation of snapping as the arm is actively
extended with ulnar nerve symptoms - Snapping Triceps Syndrome
- Spinner and Goldner, JBJS 1998
- Nerve is stable in cubital tunnel
26Stability Exam
- No inherent stability to Elbow
- At full extension, olecranon tip/olecranon fossa
articulation provides some stability against
varus/valgus stresses - Radial head provides some stability against
valgus laxity - Pts with radial head fractures may have increased
valgus carrying angle
27Stability Exam
- Ulnar Collateral Ligament
- Provides most valgus stability
- Most isolated stabilizer at 70 degrees flexion
- Difficult to examine due to free range of
shoulder motion - Place patient in position with shoulder
externally rotated - PRONE or SUPINE or BOTH
28UCL InjuryNon-Contact
- History
- - Acute medial pain
- - Onset during throwing, inadequate warmup
- - Pop heard or felt
- - Previous Hx of pain, steroid injection
29UCL InjuryNon-Contact
- Physical exam
- - Medial elbow ecchymosis
- - Ulnar nerve symptoms
- - Tender at ant. bundle
- - Difficult exam
- /- instability, dynamic???
- X-ray arthrogram, stress view
30Palpation of UCL
- Deep structure covered by flexor-pronator mass
- Course of ligament from ME to Sublime tubercle of
proximal ulna - Inserts just distal to articular surface
- Flexion of elbow will move muscle mass
anteriorly, uncovering UCL - Pain with palpation in this region may be
indicative of UCL pathology (not specific)
31Palpation of UCL
Palpate in flexion to move flexor-pronator mass
anteriorly
32Testing the UCL
- With patient supine or prone, abduct and
maximally externally rotate shoulder - Elbow flexed 25 degrees
- Apply valgus stress
- Assess for end-feel and amount of opening
- Should not induce any pain in normal elbow
33UCL Stress Test - Seated
34UCL Stress Test - Supine
35UCL Stress Test - Prone(ODriscoll)
36Sensory Examination
- Cursory sensory exam in all patients
- Bilateral comparison
- Subtle differences in sensory function may not
represent true pathology, but may be the first
indicator of more serious pathology - Musculocutaneous, MABC, LABC, Radial, Ulnar,
Median
37Sensory Examination
- Musculocutaneous
- Antecubital fossa
- Radial
- First dorsal webspace of hand
- Ulnar
- Ulnar aspect of 4th and 5th fingers
- Median
- Pad of Index and Middle
38Neruovascular Exam
- Pulses should be checked in both arms and the
quality of the pulse as well as the rate should
be compared. - Dampened pulses may indicate proximal obstruction
- Capillary refill and general perfusion should be
checked in any patient complaining of altered
sensation in fingertips
39Tinnels Test
- Gentle percussion of the ulnar nerve above or
within the cubital tunnel should not elicit pain
in the normal elbow - Pain or paresthesias in the ulnar distribution is
considered a positive test
40Strength Examination
- Any routine examination of the elbow should
include a strength examination - Rotator cuff
- Deltoid
- Biceps
- Triceps
- Pronation and Supination
- Wrist dorsal- and volar-flexion
- Grip, Intrinsics, and APL
41Testing Flexion Strength
Brachioradialis
Biceps
42Lateral Ligamentous Exam
- Radial Collateral Ligament and Lateral Ulnar
Collateral Ligament make up lateral ligament
complex - Apply varus stress with elbow flexed 15-20
degrees - Arm is internally rotated to prevent shoulder
rotation - Assess any pain or increased varus laxity
43Posterolateral Rotatory Instability
- PLRI due to insufficiency of LUCL
- Test for PLRI Pivot Shift
- Anesthetized supine patient
- Forward flexion, external rotation of shoulder
- Forearm supination
- Axial load with valgus stress as arm is gradually
flexed - Radial head subluxes posteriorly and clunks
back into place
44Pivot Shift Test for PLRI
Supine, flexed to 70 degrees, axial load with
valgus stress
45Valgus Extension Overload
- Medial stress
- Lateral compression
- Forced extension
46Valgus Extension Overload Syndrome
- Symptomatic lesion in baseball pitchers
- Posteromedial osteophytes abuts against the
medial olecranon fossa - Results in pain loss of control velocity in
baseball pitchers
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48Mechanism of Injury
49Valgus Extension Overload
- VEO occurs in throwers as the posteromedial tip
of the olecranon process contacts either soft
tissue or bone within the olecranon fossa as the
elbow rapidly extends during the acceleration
phase of throwing
50Test for VEO
- Forearm in neutral rotation
- Elbow repeatedly brought forcefully into full
extension while a valgus stress is applied - Pain at posteromedial olecranon tip or pain with
palpation of posteromedial olecranon tip is
considered a positive test
51Repeatedly move elbow into full extension with
valgus stress
52Diagnostic Imaging
53Arthroscopic Stress View forUCL Laxity
54Stress Radiography
- Graded stress x-rays in evaluation of injury to
the UCL of the elbow
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56MRI of Torn UCL
57Summary
- Develop a system and follow it
- Cover all bases
- A thorough history will help guide and direct
physical exam - Compare to non-affected side
- Supplement info with radiographic studies
58Thank You