Spinal examination
Follow the scheme below:
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Inspection
-
Palpation
-
Measurement
-
Movement
Before starting
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Introduce yourself
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Ask permission to perform examination
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Explain what the examination entails
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Expose the patient appropriately - the patient should undress to their undergarments including the lower limbs.
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Tell the patient to let you know if anything you do is uncomfortable
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Remember - always watch the patients face
Inspection
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General observation
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Does the patient look well?
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Assess the patient's posture - any obvious conditions?
Patient Standing
Remember to inspect from all sides (front, laterally and from behind):
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Skin
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Scars (surgical scars)
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Sinuses (deep infection)
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Unusual skin creases
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Pigmentation
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Cafe au lait spots (Neurofibromatosis)
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Hairy patch (spinal dysraphism)
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Mongolian Blue spot (no clinical significance - more common in asians)
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Spine
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Kyphosis (exaggerated or reduced)
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Lumbar lordosis (exaggerated or reduced)
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Scoliosis (asymmetry of shoulder height / trunk balance / loin crease)
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List ( may be sign of prolapsed intervetrbral disc causing nerve root irritation)
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Asymmetry of the pelvis (leg length discrepancy)
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Any chest deformity
The
wall test
will mask even small fixed flexion deformities: Ask the patient to stand with the back straight against a wall. Observe whether the following are in contact with the wall:
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Occiput
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Shoulders
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Buttocks
-
Heels
Patient Walking
Palpation
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