Shoulder examination
Follow the scheme below:
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Inspection
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Palpation
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Movement
Before starting
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Introduce yourself
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Explain what the examination entails
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Ask permission to perform examination
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Expose the patient appropriately - from the waist above exposing both the upper limbs, but leaving the underwear on
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Preserve dignity bu using a blanket appropriately
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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
General observation
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Does the patient look well?
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Does the patient suffer from any obvious medical conditions?
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Hands (Rheumatoid arthritis?)
Patient Standing
Remember to inspect from the front, side and above:
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Skin
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Scars
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Bruising
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Skin changes
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Sinuses
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Inflammation
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Asymmetry - supraclavicular fossa
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Muscle wasting
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Especially of the deltoid (disuse or axillary nerve palsy)
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Periscapular muscles (supraspinatus and infraspinatus)
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Deformity
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Sternoclavicular (SCJ) (prominent - subluxation)
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Acromioclavicular (ACJ) joint (prominent - subluxation or osteoarthritis)
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Clavicle (old fractures)
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Shoulder dislocation
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Popeye muscle (rupture of proximal portion of long head of biceps)
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Swelling of the joint
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Axilla
From behind, look for:
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Rotator cuff wasting
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Scapula normmaly shaped and situated (Sprengel's shoulder, Klippel-Feil syndrome)
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Webbing of the skin at the root of the neck (Klippel-Feil syndrome)
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Winging of the scapula (paralysis of the serratus anterior muscle due to long thoracic nerve palsy)
Palpation
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