Welcome
Categories
- !New! Health Videos
- Blood System and blood disorders
- Cancer
- Cardiovascular system and disorders
- Diabetes
- Digestive system
- Endocrine System and Disorders
- Eye disorders
- Food and Water Borne
- Genetic disorders
- Genitourinary system
- Immune system and Disorders
- Infectious Diseases
- Main
- Mental Health Disorders
- Musculoskeletal Disorders
- Neurological Disorders
- Nutrition and Metabolism
- Respiratory System
- Sexually Transmitted Diseases
- Skin
- Special senses
Popular terms
anorexia nervosa
Antibiotics
antibodies
Arthritis
Cancer
carcinoma
chemotherapy
clinical features
Diabetes
diabetes insipidus
differential diagnosis
ear
energy intake
epstein barr virus
excretion
food
germ cell tumours
head injury
hepatitis b
herpes simplex virus
immune system
infectious
Infectious Diseases
inflammation
inoculation
insulin like growth factor
lymphadenopathy
malignancy
mmhg
necrosis factor
obesity
pain
plasma membrane
psychiatric disorders
red cells
renal failure
rheumatoid arthritis
sodium chloride
systemic lupus erythematosus
t cells
tumour
tumour cells
tumours
United Kingdom
Vomiting
Meta
EXAMINATION OF THE JOINTS
27/11/09
Always observe a patient, looking for disabilities, as he or she walks into the room and sits down. General and neurological examinations are often necessary. Guidelines for rapid examinations of the limbs and spine are shown in Practical box 10.1.
Examining an individual joint involves three stages – looking, feeling and moving:
- Appearance. Look at it for swelling, rash or erythema, muscle wasting, deformity such as a distal bone displaced laterally as in knock knees (genu valgus) or bowed legs (genu varus), fixed flexion or hyperextension, loss of normal range and lack of fluidity of movement, and any pain caused by movement.
- Feel it for tenderness, warmth (indicates inflammation) and swelling which may be due to fluid, soft tissue or
bone. Common descriptors are ‘fluctuant’ (fluid), ‘firm’ or ‘boggy’ (swelling of the synovium), and ‘hard’ (bony). - Movement. Move it to assess the passive range of movement (e.g. flexion, extension, abduction, adduction and rotation), any instability, or the production of pain and crepitus (grating) seen with cartilage damage. The normal range varies between individuals. Comparing right with left and asking the patient about any change in range help to assess whether the endpoints are normal or not. A screening examination of the locomotor system, known by the acronym GALS (global assessment of the locomotor system) has been devised.
X-ray of the joint often forms an integral part of the examination.