Finkelstein Test: Difference between revisions

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== [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wiqpJpeYP-E&feature=related Technique]<br>  ==
== [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wiqpJpeYP-E&feature=related Technique]<br>  ==


To begin, the patient must sit comfortable and relaxed on the examination table. Next, examine the patients hand in the air, while the other hand rests just beside the body. The therapist then asks the patient to make a fist around a thumb and to perform a ulnar deviation. <ref>Morbus de De Quervain;  tendinitis van twee strekkers  van de duim (EPB en APL) in  het eerste extensor compartiment</ref>, <ref>Patrick M Foye, MD; Chief Editor: Rene Cailliet, MD; Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation for De Quervain Tenosynovitis</ref><br>  
To begin, the patient must sit comfortable and relaxed on the examination table. Next, examine the patients hand in the air, while the other hand rests just beside the body. The therapist then asks the patient to make a fist around a thumb and to perform a ulnar deviation. <ref>Morbus de De Quervain;  tendinitis van twee strekkers  van de duim (EPB en APL) in  het eerste extensor compartiment  
(Level of evidence = E)</ref>, [http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/327453-overview <ref>Patrick M Foye, MD; Chief Editor: Rene Cailliet, MD; Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation for De Quervain Tenosynovitis  
(Level of evidence = E )</ref>]<br>  


A modified version of the test is that the patient must sit comfortable and relaxed on the examination table. The patient must hold his afflicted hand in the air, while the other hand should be resting against his/ her body. The therapist grasps the afflicted hand of the patient and rotates it in ulnar deviation. He pulls the patient’s thumb across the palm of his/ her hand. This causes additional stress on the extensor tendons of the thumb. <ref>Richard Day, John Fox; Neuro- musculoskeletal clinical tests; Churchill Livingstone Elsevier 2009- pag 113</ref>, <ref>Javier González-Iglesias, Peter Huijbregts, César Fernández-de-las-Peñas, Joshua A. Cleland; Differential Diagnosis and Physical Therapy Management of a Patient With Radial Wrist Pain of 6 Months’ Duration: A Case Report; journal of orthopaedic &amp;amp; sports physical therapy: volume 40,number 6, june 2010.</ref><br>  
A modified version of the test is that the patient must sit comfortable and relaxed on the examination table. The patient must hold his afflicted hand in the air, while the other hand should be resting against his/ her body. The therapist grasps the afflicted hand of the patient and rotates it in ulnar deviation. He pulls the patient’s thumb across the palm of his/ her hand. This causes additional stress on the extensor tendons of the thumb. <ref>Richard Day, John Fox; Neuro- musculoskeletal clinical tests; Churchill Livingstone Elsevier 2009- pag 113 (Level of evidence = E)</ref>, <ref>Javier González-Iglesias, Peter Huijbregts, César Fernández-de-las-Peñas, Joshua A. Cleland; Differential Diagnosis and Physical Therapy Management of a Patient With Radial Wrist Pain of 6 Months’ Duration: A Case Report; journal of orthopaedic sports physical therapy: volume 40,number 6, june 2010.       (level of evidence = C)</ref><br>  


*<u>Negative result</u>: The patient doesn’t feel any pain radiating up the inside of his/ her arm from the thumb. <ref>Richard Day, John Fox; Neuro- musculoskeletal clinical tests; Churchill Livingstone Elsevier 2009- pag 113</ref>  
*<u>Negative result</u>: The patient doesn’t feel any pain radiating up the inside of his/ her arm from the thumb. <ref>Richard Day, John Fox; Neuro- musculoskeletal clinical tests; Churchill Livingstone Elsevier 2009- pag 113 (level of evidence = E)</ref>  
*<u>Positive result</u>: Ask the patient if he or she feels pain radiating up the inside of his or her arm from the thumb. If the patient reports noticeable pain then, the Finkelstein's test is positive, what indicates De Quervains syndrome. <ref>Richard Day, John Fox; Neuro- musculoskeletal clinical tests; Churchill Livingstone Elsevier 2009- pag 113</ref>, <ref>How to Perform a Finkelstein's Test of the Hand</ref>
*<u>Positive result</u>: Ask the patient if he or she feels pain radiating up the inside of his or her arm from the thumb. If the patient reports noticeable pain then, the Finkelstein's test is positive, what indicates De Quervains syndrome. <ref>Richard Day, John Fox; Neuro- musculoskeletal clinical tests; Churchill Livingstone Elsevier 2009- pag 113 (level of evidence = E)</ref>, [http://www.ehow.com/how_2212413_perform-finkelsteins-test-hand.html <ref>How to Perform a Finkelstein's Test of the Hand (level of evidence = E)</ref>]


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<u>Reability:</u> Investigation into the validity of tests are important to know whether our tests are reliable or not. Studies that test the reliability of the Finkelstein test are very limited. One research shows that the Finkelstein test has a high reliability <ref>Javier González-Iglesias, Peter Huijbregts, César Fernández-de-las-Peñas, Joshua A. Cleland; Differential Diagnosis and Physical Therapy Management of a Patient With Radial Wrist Pain of 6 Months’ Duration: A Case Report; journal of orthopaedic &amp;amp; sports physical therapy: volume 40,number 6, june 2010.</ref>, but further research is still required. To prove or to refute the reliability of the Finkelstein test further research is required. <br>  
<u>Reability:</u> Investigation into the validity of tests are important to know whether our tests are reliable or not. Studies that test the reliability of the Finkelstein test are very limited. One research shows that the Finkelstein test has a high reliability <ref>Javier González-Iglesias, Peter Huijbregts, César Fernández-de-las-Peñas, Joshua A. Cleland; Differential Diagnosis and Physical Therapy Management of a Patient With Radial Wrist Pain of 6 Months’ Duration: A Case Report; journal of orthopaedic; sports physical therapy: volume 40,number 6, june 2010.(level of evidence = C)</ref>, but further research is still required. To prove or to refute the reliability of the Finkelstein test further research is required. <br>  


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Revision as of 17:00, 30 August 2011

Original Editor - Tracy Hall

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Search Strategy
[edit | edit source]


Databases: Pubmed, ISI Web of Knowledge, Internet.
Keywords: Finkelstein Test, hand, De Quervain’s syndrome, reability

Definition/ Description[edit | edit source]

The patient must first form a fist around the thumb and then subsequently perform an ulnar deviation.[1] , [2]

 

Clinically Relevant Anatomy [3][4] [edit | edit source]

M. extensor pollicis brevis (EPB)
Function: - wrist joint: radial abduction (0-25°)
                     - thumb: extension (90°)


M. abductor pollicis longus (APL) [5]
Function: - wrist joint: radial abduction (0- 25°)
                    - thumb: abduction (70°- 80°)

Purpose
[edit | edit source]

The Finkelstein test is used in the diagnosis of De Quervain's syndrome. [6] This fact implies a tenovaginitis and tenosynovitis of the M. extensor pollicis brevis and M. abductor pollicis longus.[7]  Finkelstein maneuver is a helpful test to diagnose deQuervain’s Tendonitis or first dorsal compartment tendonitis named after the Swiss surgeon Fritz de Quervain This is a condition brought on by irritation or inflammation of the wrist tendons at the base of the thumb . The inflammation causes the compartment (a tunnel or a sheath) around the tendon to swell and enlarge, making thumb and wrist movement painful.


Technique
[edit | edit source]

To begin, the patient must sit comfortable and relaxed on the examination table. Next, examine the patients hand in the air, while the other hand rests just beside the body. The therapist then asks the patient to make a fist around a thumb and to perform a ulnar deviation. [8], [9]

A modified version of the test is that the patient must sit comfortable and relaxed on the examination table. The patient must hold his afflicted hand in the air, while the other hand should be resting against his/ her body. The therapist grasps the afflicted hand of the patient and rotates it in ulnar deviation. He pulls the patient’s thumb across the palm of his/ her hand. This causes additional stress on the extensor tendons of the thumb. [10], [11]

  • Negative result: The patient doesn’t feel any pain radiating up the inside of his/ her arm from the thumb. [12]
  • Positive result: Ask the patient if he or she feels pain radiating up the inside of his or her arm from the thumb. If the patient reports noticeable pain then, the Finkelstein's test is positive, what indicates De Quervains syndrome. [13], [14]


Reability: Investigation into the validity of tests are important to know whether our tests are reliable or not. Studies that test the reliability of the Finkelstein test are very limited. One research shows that the Finkelstein test has a high reliability [15], but further research is still required. To prove or to refute the reliability of the Finkelstein test further research is required.



The Journal of hand surgery ISSN 0363-5023 CODEN JHSUDV 2005, vol. 30A, no1, pp. 130-135 [6 page(s) (article)] (8 ref.)[edit | edit source]

Finkelstein's test is the classic diagnostic test for de Quervain's disease. Finkelstein hypothesized that the entry of the muscle bellies of the extensor pollicis brevis (EPB) and abductor pollicis longus (APL) tendons into the first extensor compartment was responsible for the findings observed in his now eponymous test. We agree Finkelstein's hypothesis and further hypothesize that this position would induce measurable bulk (mucle mass within the retinaculum) and tethering (stretching of synovial tissue) effects within the compartment. To test this latter hypothesis we measured the excursion and gliding resistance of the EPB and APL tendons within the first compartment. Methods: Fifteen fresh-frozen cadavers were used. Gliding resistance and excursion were measured in 4 different wrist positions, including the wrist position of Finkelstein's test (30° ulnar deviation). The bulk and tethering effect was calculated based on the mean gliding resistance over the tendon proximal/distal excursion cycle and the gliding resistance at the terminal distal excursion. Results: The EPB tendon excursion was signficantly more distal in 30° ulnar deviation than in 60° extension. Additionally the bulk and tethering resistance was significantly greater in 30° ulnar deviation compared with 60° extension. For the APL tendon there was no significant difference in either the tendon excursion or the bulk and tethering resistance between 30° ulnar deviation and 60° extension. Conclusions: We showed that in the position of Finkelstein's test the EPB tendon is significantly more distal and has significantly greater bulk and tethering effect compared with the other EPB positions. This is not the case for the API. tendon in the position of Finkelstein's test. These results suggest that an abnormal Finkelstein's test reflects differences of the EPB more than it does the APL

Key Research[edit | edit source]

  • Differential Diagnosis and Physical Therapy Management of a Patient With Radial Wrist Pain of 6 Months’ Duration: A Case Report.


Resources[edit | edit source]

Pubmed and ISI Web of Knowledge, Internet.

Recent Related Research (from Pubmed)[edit | edit source]

References
[edit | edit source]

  1. De Quervain Syndrome (Level of evidence = E)
  2. Richard Day, John Fox; Neuro- musculoskeletal clinical tests; Churchill Livingstone Elsevier 2009- pag 113 (Level of evidence = E)
  3. Morbus de De Quervain; tendinitis van twee strekkers van de duim (EPB en APL) in het eerste extensor compartiment (Level of evidence = E)
  4. The electronic textbook of hand surgery (Level of evidence = E)
  5. BASIC HUMAN ANATOMY - O'RAHILLY, MÜLLER, CARPENTER & SWENSON (Level of evidence = E)
  6. De Quervain (Level of evidence E)
  7. Morbus de De Quervain; tendinitis van twee strekkers van de duim (EPB en APL) in het eerste extensor compartiment fckLR(Level of evidence =E)
  8. Morbus de De Quervain; tendinitis van twee strekkers van de duim (EPB en APL) in het eerste extensor compartiment (Level of evidence = E)
  9. Patrick M Foye, MD; Chief Editor: Rene Cailliet, MD; Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation for De Quervain Tenosynovitis (Level of evidence = E )
  10. Richard Day, John Fox; Neuro- musculoskeletal clinical tests; Churchill Livingstone Elsevier 2009- pag 113 (Level of evidence = E)
  11. Javier González-Iglesias, Peter Huijbregts, César Fernández-de-las-Peñas, Joshua A. Cleland; Differential Diagnosis and Physical Therapy Management of a Patient With Radial Wrist Pain of 6 Months’ Duration: A Case Report; journal of orthopaedic sports physical therapy: volume 40,number 6, june 2010. (level of evidence = C)
  12. Richard Day, John Fox; Neuro- musculoskeletal clinical tests; Churchill Livingstone Elsevier 2009- pag 113 (level of evidence = E)
  13. Richard Day, John Fox; Neuro- musculoskeletal clinical tests; Churchill Livingstone Elsevier 2009- pag 113 (level of evidence = E)
  14. How to Perform a Finkelstein's Test of the Hand (level of evidence = E)
  15. Javier González-Iglesias, Peter Huijbregts, César Fernández-de-las-Peñas, Joshua A. Cleland; Differential Diagnosis and Physical Therapy Management of a Patient With Radial Wrist Pain of 6 Months’ Duration: A Case Report; journal of orthopaedic; sports physical therapy: volume 40,number 6, june 2010.(level of evidence = C)

www.Emedicine.medscape.medscape.com/article/1243387 www.assh.org/Public/HandConditions/Pages/deQuervain'sTendonitis.aspx

The Journal of hand surgery ISSN 0363-5023 CODEN JHSUDV
2005, vol. 30A, no1, pp. 130-135 [6 page(s) (article)] (8 ref.)
 www.med.und.nodak.edu/users/jwhiting/finkel.html Flynn TW, Clevland JA, Whitman JM, User's Guide To The Musculoskeletal Examination;2008 evidence in motion</div>