| Literature DB >> 33614791 |
Joseph D Lamplot1, Sridhar Pinnamaneni2, Stephanie Swensen-Buza3, Cort D Lawton4, Joshua S Dines3, Danyal H Nawabi3, Warren Young3, Scott A Rodeo3, Samuel A Taylor3.
Abstract
The COVID-19 crisis has forced a sudden and dramatic shift in the way that clinicians interact with their patients, from outpatient encounters to telehealth visits utilizing a variety of internet-based videoconferencing applications. Although many aspects of pre-COVID-19 outpatient sports medicine care will ultimately resume, it is likely that telehealth will persist because of its practicality and because of patient demand for access to efficient and convenient health care. Physical examination is widely considered a critical obstacle to a thorough evaluation of sports medicine patients during telehealth visits. However, a closer reflection suggests that a majority of the examination maneuvers are possible virtually with limited, if any, modifications. Thus, we provide a comprehensive shoulder and knee physical examination for sports medicine telehealth visits, including (1) verbal instructions in layman's terms that can be provided to the patient before or read verbatim during the visit, (2) multimedia options (narrated videos and annotated presentations) of the shoulder and knee examination that can be provided to patients via screen-share options, and (3) a corresponding checklist to aid in documentation.Entities:
Keywords: knee examination; physical examination; shoulder examination; telehealth; telemedicine; virtual examination
Year: 2020 PMID: 33614791 PMCID: PMC7871077 DOI: 10.1177/2325967120962869
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orthop J Sports Med ISSN: 2325-9671
Figure 1.Schematic of a virtual examination for the (A) shoulder and (B) knee.
Figure 2.Modifications to common maneuvers for a virtual shoulder examination. (A) The Jobe test (thumbs down in abduction) with soup cans in a grocery bag for resistance. (B) Resisted external rotation testing. (C) Resisted internal rotation testing. (D) The Hawkins test using the contralateral hand to push the abducted shoulder into internal rotation. (E) Cross-body adduction using the contralateral arm. (F) The O’Brien (active compression) test with the thumb pointed down and resistance provided by soup cans in a grocery bag. (G) The O’Brien test with the thumb pointed up.
Common Household Items for Strength Testing
| Approximate Weight, lb/kg | Preferred Household Item(s) | Alternative Household Item(s) |
|---|---|---|
| 1.0/0.5 | 1 canned good | 12- to 16-oz bottle of water, soda, or juice |
| 4.0/2.0 | 4 canned goods | 2-L bottle of soda; carton of milk |
| 8.0/4.0 | 8 canned goods | Gallon of water or milk; large bottle of laundry detergent or bleach |
Approximately 12-16 fl oz per canned good (soup, beans, diced tomatoes, etc).
Avoiding glass objects.
Figure 3.Modifications to common maneuvers for a virtual knee examination. (A) The lever test for anterior cruciate ligament integrity. A soup can is placed beneath the calf, and the distal femur is pushed downward with both hands. A positive test result is an objective and visual finding in which the patient’s heel does not rise off of the table. (B) The bounce test with a soup can placed beneath the heel. The patient is asked to slightly bend the knee and then allow it to bounce down so that it is completely straight, repeating this several times quickly. (C) Patellar apprehension test with the ankle of the affected leg crossed over the contralateral ankle and both thumbs used to apply a lateral directed force on the medial facet of the patella. (D) Hyperflexion test with a towel wrapped around the anterior ankle, which is used to pull the knee into hyperflexion. The towel is allowed to relax and then pulled back again several times quickly.