Patellar Grind Test: Difference between revisions

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== Evidence  ==
== Evidence  ==


Provide the evidence for this technique here
This technique is based on the mechanics of the patellofemoral joint and has not been specifically tested. Many patients will have pain with this test regardless of whether they exhibit signs and symptoms of patellofemoral pain<sup>2</sup>. Most of the clinical test for patellofemoral pain have low reliability or are untested, and there is no gold standard test for diagnosis of this disorder<sup>3</sup>.


== Resources  ==
== Resources  ==

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Purpose
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The purpose of this test is to detect the presence of patellofemoral joint disorder (AKA: patellofemoral pain syndrome, chondromalacia patellae, patellofemoral DJD)

Technique
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Pt is positioned in supine or long sitting with the involved knee extended. The examiner places the web space of his hand just superior to the patella while applying pressure. The patient is instructed to gently and gradually contract the quadriceps muscle. A positive sign on this test is pain in the patellofemoral joint1.

Evidence[edit | edit source]

This technique is based on the mechanics of the patellofemoral joint and has not been specifically tested. Many patients will have pain with this test regardless of whether they exhibit signs and symptoms of patellofemoral pain2. Most of the clinical test for patellofemoral pain have low reliability or are untested, and there is no gold standard test for diagnosis of this disorder3.

Resources[edit | edit source]

add any relevant resources here

[1]

References
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  1. Baxter R. Pocket Guide to Musculoskeletal Assessment, 2nd edition. Copyright 2003, Elsevier Science (USA).

1. [1]

2.

  1. Baxter R. Pocket Guide to Musculoskeletal Assessment, 2nd edition. Copyright 2003, Elsevier Science (USA).