Wrist drop physical examination: Difference between revisions
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== | ==Physical Examination== | ||
To demonstrate wrist drop, hold your arm out in front of you with your forearm parallel to the floor. With the back of your hand facing the ceiling (i.e. pronated), let your hand hang limply so that your fingers point downward. A person with wrist drop would be unable to move from this position to one in which the fingers are pointing up towards the ceiling. | ===Extremities=== | ||
An exam of the arm, hand, and wrist may find: | |||
*Decreased ability to extend the arm at the elbow | |||
*Decreased ability to rotate the arm outward ([[supination]]) | |||
*Difficulty lifting the wrist or fingers (extensor muscle weakness) | |||
*Muscle loss ([[muscle atrophy|atrophy]]) in the [[forearm]] | |||
*Weakness of the wrist and finger | |||
*To demonstrate wrist drop, hold your arm out in front of you with your forearm parallel to the floor. With the back of your hand facing the ceiling (i.e. pronated), let your hand hang limply so that your fingers point downward. A person with wrist drop would be unable to move from this position to one in which the fingers are pointing up towards the ceiling. | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
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[[Category:Emergency medicine]] | [[Category:Emergency medicine]] | ||
[[Category:Needs content]] | [[Category:Needs content]] | ||
[[Category:Needs overview]] |
Latest revision as of 20:39, 28 January 2013
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor-In-Chief: Cafer Zorkun, M.D., Ph.D. [2]
Physical Examination
Extremities
An exam of the arm, hand, and wrist may find:
- Decreased ability to extend the arm at the elbow
- Decreased ability to rotate the arm outward (supination)
- Difficulty lifting the wrist or fingers (extensor muscle weakness)
- Muscle loss (atrophy) in the forearm
- Weakness of the wrist and finger
- To demonstrate wrist drop, hold your arm out in front of you with your forearm parallel to the floor. With the back of your hand facing the ceiling (i.e. pronated), let your hand hang limply so that your fingers point downward. A person with wrist drop would be unable to move from this position to one in which the fingers are pointing up towards the ceiling.