Hip Quadrant Test: Difference between revisions

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== Expert Opinion  ==
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== Purpose<br>  ==
== Purpose<br>  ==


This a general test to identify the presence of hip pathology.<br>  
add the purpose of this assessment technique here<br>  


== Technique<ref>Flynn T, Cleland J, Whitman J. User's guide to the musculoskeletal examination: Fundamentals for the evidence-based clinician. Buckner, Kentucky: Evidence in Motion; 2008.</ref><br>  ==
== Technique<br>  ==


The patient should be positioned in supine. The therapist should flex and adduct the hip until resistance is met.&nbsp; The knee should be allowed to be in a comfortably flexed position.&nbsp; The therapist then maintains flexion into resistance and moves the hip into abduction, bringing the hip through a full arc of motion.&nbsp; If the patient reports no pain, the examiner then applies a compressive force through the long-axis of the femur to the hip.&nbsp; The test is considered positive if abnormal resistance is met or if the test reproduces the patient's complaint of pain.
Describe how to carry out this assessment technique here


== Evidence  ==
== Evidence  ==


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Provide the evidence for this technique here
|+ Diagnostic test properties for the detection of acetabular labral tears<ref>Narvani A, Tsirdis E, Kendall S, Chaudhuri R, Thomas P. A preliminary report on prevalence of acetabular labral tears in sports patients with groin pain. Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2003;11:403-408.fckLRfckLR</ref>
 
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== Resources  ==
| Sensitivity
 
| &nbsp; 0.75
add any relevant resources here
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| Specificity
| &nbsp; 0.43
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| Positive Likelihood Ratio
| &nbsp; 1.32
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| Negative Likelihood Ratio
| &nbsp; 0.58
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== References<br>  ==
== References<br>  ==


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Revision as of 21:17, 24 March 2009

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Purpose
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Technique
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Describe how to carry out this assessment technique here

Evidence[edit | edit source]

Provide the evidence for this technique here

Resources[edit | edit source]

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References
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