This article may be too technical for most readers to understand.(December 2023) |
The drop arm test is designed to determine a patient's ability to sustain humeral joint motion through eccentric contraction as the arm is taken through the full motion of abduction to adduction. It will determine if the patient has an underlying rotator cuff dysfunction.[1]
Procedure
editThe patient is asked to either sit on an examination table or stand while performing this test. Examiner should be standing on the patient's lateral side or behind the arm being evaluated. Examiner will passively abduct the patient's shoulder (humerus) to 90 degrees. The patient is then asked to slowly lower or adduct the shoulder to their side.
If the patient is unable to perform this motion, the examiner can hold the humerus at 90 degrees of abduction and apply slight pressure to the distal forearm. If the patient's arm falls to their side, this also indicates a rotator cuff dysfunction. Inability to controllably lower the arm can indicate a rotator cuff dysfunction, most commonly the supraspinatus.[1][2][3]
Mechanism
editThe drop arm test works by going through subluxation via the humeral head looking for a tear or weakness in the supraspinatus tendon.[2]
Results
editA positive test is found if the patient cannot perform this motion of adducting the arm back to the body controllably or if the patient experiences pain while performing this test.[1][2]
References
edit- ^ a b c Starkey, Chad; Brown, Sara; Ryan, Jeffrey (2010). "16". Orthopedic and Athletic Injury Examination Handbook (2nd ed.). Philadelphia: F.A. Davis Company. p. 421. ISBN 978-0-8036-1722-3.
- ^ a b c Çalış, Mustafa; Akgün, Kenan; Birtane, Murat; Karacan, Ilhan; Çalış, Havva; Tüzün, Fikret (2000). "Diagnostic values of clinical diagnostic tests in subacromial impingement syndrome". Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases. 59 (1): 44–47. doi:10.1136/ard.59.1.44. PMC 1752990. PMID 10627426.
- ^ "Drop Arm Test". Physical Therapy Haven.