| Literature DB >> 19468870 |
Abstract
Calf strains are common injuries seen in primary care and sports medicine clinics. Differentiating strains of the gastrocnemius or soleus is important for treatment and prognosis. Simple clinical testing can assist in diagnosis and is aided by knowledge of the anatomy and common clinical presentation.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19468870 PMCID: PMC2697334 DOI: 10.1007/s12178-009-9045-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Rev Musculoskelet Med ISSN: 1935-9748
| Grade | Symptoms | Signs | Pathologic correlation | Radiology correlation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Grade 1 1st degree mild | Sharp pain at time of injury or pain with activity. Usually able to continue activity | Mild pain and localized tenderness. Mild spasm and swelling No or minimal loss of strength and ROM | <10% muscle fiber disruption | Bright signal on fluid-sensitive sequences. Feathery appearance <5% muscle fiber involvement |
Grade 2 2nd degree moderate | Unable to continue activity | Clear loss of strength and ROM | >10–50% disruption of muscle fibers | Change in myotendinous junction. Edema and hemorrhage |
Grade 3 3rd degree severe | Immediate severe pain, disability | Complete loss of muscle function Palpable defect or mass. Possible positive Tompson’s test | 50–100% disruption of muscle fibers | Complete disruption of discontinuity of muscle. Extensive edema and hemorrhage. Wavy tendon morphology and retraction |
ROM range of motion