Musculoskeletal problems of the wrist and hand physical examination

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]

Physical Examination

Wrist Function

  • Range of Motion
    • Radiocarpal joint flexion and extension
    • Normal flexion 90°, extension 80°
    • Mild pain/stiffness + normal ROM- sprain or mild arthritis
    • Moderate pain/stiffness + 20% loss ROM- arthritis
    • Severe pain/stiffness + 50% loss ROM- acute gout, fracture (navicular/distal radius), dislocation
    • Refusal to move- septic joint, fracture
    • Loss of ROM in only one direction (due to pain)
      • Tendon injury or inflammation
      • Pain with passive stretching of tendon (opposite direction)
  • Grip Strength
    • Indirect measure of strength/integrity of forearm muscles
    • Can be measured objectively using rolled up partly inflated blood pressure (BP) cuff (patient grip measured in mmHg)
    • Reduced Grip Strength
      • Disuse atrophy, arthritis (hand or wrist), CTS, DeQuervain’s, osteonecrosis
      • May also be reduced in C8 radiculopathy, severe epicondylitis

Specific Maneuvers

  • Palpation of the Radiocarpal Joint Line
      • Junction of distal radius, scaphoid & lunate
      • At intersection of index finger extensor tendon & distal radius
    • Mild tenderness- simple sprain
    • Moderate tenderness- osteoarthritis (OA)
    • Severe pain- crystal-induced arthritis, Colles’ fracture, scaphoid fracture, perilunate dislocation
    • Swelling- mild swelling will fill the depression over the navicular (severe swelling causes a bulge)
    • Loss of ROM- significant loss (45° flexion / extension) with advanced disease
  • Palpation of the Scaphoid Bone
    • Scaphoid forms floor of anatomical snuff box (distal radial styloid + base of thumb + abductor pollicis longus + extensor pollicis longus)
    • Tenderness in anatomical snuff box = scaphoid pathology (fracture, osteonecrosis, arthritis)
  • Palpation of the Radial Styloid
    • Pain suggests DeQuervain’s tenosynovitis (friction-induced irritation of anatomic snuffbox tendons)
    • Confirmatory Testing
      • Pain aggravated by thumb extension or abduction against resistance
        • (Abduction = movement of thumb perpendicular to palm)
      • Pain worse with passive stretch of tendons over radial styloid via thumb flexion
        • (Finkelstein’s test)
  • Compression of the Base of Thumb
    • Screen for CMC arthritis (or strain)
    • Pain with compression of the CMC joint in the ante partum (AP) plane suggests CMC arthritis
    • Pressure applied from the snuffbox is much less painful
    • Swelling best seen with wrist turned radial-side-up
    • Crepitation with forcible rotation of metacarpal against trapezium (mortar & pestle sign)
    • Bony protuberance of metacarpal or thenar atrophy- late stages
  • Palpation of Metocarpophalangeal Joint
    • Detect gamekeeper’s thumb (ulnar collateral ligament injury)
    • Local tenderness/swelling along ulnar side of MP joint suggests diagnosis
    • Instability or pain of MP joint with valgus stress (examiner’s thumb at MP joint, index finger at interphalangeal (IP) joint)
    • Loss of MP flexion (normal = 90°) and pinch strength can occur with acute symptoms/swelling
  • Tests for Nerve Compression
    • CTS
    • Sensory loss in the first 3 fingertips- two-point discrimination, light touch, pain decreased
    • Weakness of thumb opposition- best detected when pt holds thumb + 5th finger together
    • Tinel Sign
      • Vigorous tapping over transverse carpal ligament with wrist in extension
      • Positive if reproduces pain and paresthesia
    • Phalen Sign
      • Both wrists held in extreme volar flexion for 30-60 seconds
      • Positive if symptoms reproduced
    • Pronator Teres Compression
      • If no compression detected at wrist, test for proximal compression
      • Apply pressure to forearm 1 to 2 inches distal to antecubital fossa
      • Positive if symptoms reproduced with compression
      • Sensitivity increased by resisting forearm pronation
    • Note- Tests can be totally normal despite significant compression (symptoms vary over time)
      • Sensitivity and specificity of provocative tests low
  • Transillumination
    • Distinguishes between ganglion (transilluminates) and solid mass
    • Ganglion cyst should be highly mobile and fluctuant, not adherent; ROM should be full
    • Aspiration of cyst yields thick, colorless fluid

References

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