FADER Test: Difference between revisions

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add the purpose of this assessment technique here<br>  
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== Technique ==
== Technique<ref>Grimaldi, Alison, et al. “[https://bjsm.bmj.com/content/51/6/519 Utility of Clinical Tests to Diagnose MRI-Confirmed Gluteal Tendinopathy in Patients Presenting with Lateral Hip Pain].” ''British Journal of Sports Medicine'', vol. 51, no. 6, 15 Sept. 2016, pp. 519–524, <nowiki>https://doi.org/10.1136/bjsports-2016-096175</nowiki>.


{{#ev:youtube|v=WndOR2lgbyA}}
‌</ref>  ==
'''FADER:'''
 
# Patient lies in supine.
# Bring the hip into passive flexion to 90°.
# Then passively adduct and externally rotated the hip to end range position.
 
'''Interpretation:''' Pain reproduction indicates a positive test result. Otherwise, the test can be continued on by adding resisted isometric internal rotation. This is called the FADER-R test.
 
'''FADER-R:'''
 
# Patient lies supine in the FABER's position.
# Patient isometrically resist against internal rotation.
 
'''Interpretation:'''Pain reproduction indicates a positive test result.{{#ev:youtube|v=WndOR2lgbyA}}


== Evidence  ==
== Evidence  ==

Revision as of 10:58, 2 July 2023

Original Editor - Trista Chan
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Description[edit | edit source]

Clinically Relevant Anatomy[edit | edit source]

Purpose[edit | edit source]

add the purpose of this assessment technique here

Technique[1][edit | edit source]

FADER:

  1. Patient lies in supine.
  2. Bring the hip into passive flexion to 90°.
  3. Then passively adduct and externally rotated the hip to end range position.

Interpretation: Pain reproduction indicates a positive test result. Otherwise, the test can be continued on by adding resisted isometric internal rotation. This is called the FADER-R test.

FADER-R:

  1. Patient lies supine in the FABER's position.
  2. Patient isometrically resist against internal rotation.

Interpretation:Pain reproduction indicates a positive test result.

Evidence[edit | edit source]

Provide the evidence for this technique here

Clinical Relevance[edit | edit source]

Resources[edit | edit source]

add any relevant resources here

References[edit | edit source]

  1. Grimaldi, Alison, et al. “Utility of Clinical Tests to Diagnose MRI-Confirmed Gluteal Tendinopathy in Patients Presenting with Lateral Hip Pain.” British Journal of Sports Medicine, vol. 51, no. 6, 15 Sept. 2016, pp. 519–524, https://doi.org/10.1136/bjsports-2016-096175. ‌