Diagnostic Tests for Muscle pain
Muscle pain Tests: Book Excerpts
Home Diagnostic Testing
These home medical tests may be relevant to Muscle pain:
- Nerve Neuropathy: Related Home Testing:
Muscle pain Diagnosis: Book Excerpts
Diagnosis of Muscle pain: medical news summaries:
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Diagnostic Tests for Muscle pain: Online Medical Books
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for more information about the diagnostic tests for Muscle pain.
Muscle weakness:
History and physical examination
(Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition))
Begin by determining the location of the patient’s muscle weakness. Ask if he has difficulty with specific movements such as rising from a chair. Find out when he first noticed the weakness; ask him whether it worsens with exercise or as the day progresses. Also ask about related symptoms, especially muscle or joint pain, altered sensory function, and fatigue.
Obtain a medical history, noting especially chronic disease, such as hyperthyroidism; musculoskeletal or neurologic problems, including recent trauma; a family history of chronic muscle weakness, especially in males; and alcohol and drug use.
Focus your physical examination on evaluating muscle strength. Test all major muscles bilaterally. (See Testing muscle strength, pages 418 and 419.) When testing, make sure that the patient’s effort is constant; if it isn’t, suspect pain or other reluctance to make the effort. If the patient complains of pain, ease or discontinue testing and have him try the movements again. Remember that the patient’s dominant arm, hand, and leg are somewhat stronger than their nondominant counterparts. Besides testing individual muscle strength, test for range of motion (ROM) at all major joints (shoulder, elbow, wrist, hip, knee, and ankle). Also test sensory function in the involved areas, and test deep tendon reflexes (DTRs) bilaterally.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition), 2006
Muscle weakness:
History and physical examination
(Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition))
Begin by determining the location of the patient’s muscle weakness. Ask if he has difficulty with specific movements, such as rising from a chair. Find out when he first noticed the weakness; ask him whether it worsens with exercise or as the day progresses. Also ask about related symptoms, especially muscle or joint pain, altered sensory function, and fatigue.
Obtain a medical history, noting especially chronic disease such as hyperthyroidism; musculoskeletal or neurologic problems, including recent trauma; family history of chronic muscle weakness, especially in males; and alcohol and drug use.
Focus your physical examination on evaluating muscle strength. Test all major muscles bilaterally. (See Testing muscle strength, pages 530 and 531.) When testing, make sure the patient’s effort is constant; if it isn’t, suspect pain or other reluctance to make the effort. If the patient complains of pain, ease or discontinue testing and have him try the movements again. Remember that the patient’s dominant arm, hand, and leg are somewhat stronger than their nondominant counterparts. Besides testing individual muscle strength, test for range of motion at all major joints (shoulder, elbow, wrist, hip, knee, and ankle). Also test sensory function in the involved areas, and test deep tendon reflexes bilaterally.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition), 2006
Muscle weakness:
Physical assessment
(Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses)
Focus your physical assessment on evaluating muscle strength. Test all major muscles bilaterally. (See Testing muscle strength, pages 428 and 429.)
When testing, make sure the patient’s effort is constant; if it isn’t, suspect pain or other reluctance to make the effort. If the patient complains of pain, ease or discontinue testing and have him try the movements again. Remember that the patient’s dominant arm, hand, and leg are somewhat stronger than their nondominant counterparts. Besides testing individual muscle strength, test for range of motion (ROM) at all major joints (shoulder, elbow, wrist, hip, knee, and ankle). Also test sensory function in the involved areas, and test deep tendon reflexes (DTRs) bilaterally.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses, 2007
Muscle weakness:
History and physical examination
(Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms)
Begin by determining the location of the patient's muscle weakness. Ask if he has difficulty with specific movements such as rising from a chair. Find out when he first noticed the weakness; ask him whether it worsens with exercise or as the day progresses. Also ask about related symptoms, especially muscle or joint pain, altered sensory function, and fatigue.
Obtain a medical history, noting especially chronic disease, such as hyperthyroidism; musculoskeletal or neurologic problems, including recent trauma; a family history of chronic muscle weakness, especially in males; and alcohol and drug use.
Focus your physical examination on evaluating muscle strength. Test all major muscles bilaterally. (See Testing muscle strength, pages 410 and 411.) When testing, make sure that the patient's effort is constant; if it isn't, suspect pain or other reluctance to make the effort. If the patient complains of pain, ease or discontinue testing and have him try the movements again. Remember that the patient's dominant arm, hand, and leg are somewhat stronger than their nondominant counterparts. Besides testing individual muscle strength, test for range of motion (ROM) of all major joints (such as shoulder, elbow, wrist, hip, knee, and ankle). Also test sensory function in the involved areas, and test deep tendon reflexes (DTRs) bilaterally.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms, 2007
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