1. Clinical Skills
Resuscitation station
Assess danger of situation. Approach.
“Rouse”. Assessment of consciousness. Gently shake shoulders. Use pain e.g squeeze trapezius
Shout for help, ask someone to stay
Open airway: head tilt chin lift. Check for obstructions in mouth: false teeth etc.
If vomit in the mouth, turn the patient towards you to try to expel as much as possible
Assess breathing by looking, hearing, listening. Take 10 secs maximum.
If breathing:
ask onlooker to call ambulance. Put into the recovery position.
If no apparent breathing:
Send onlooker for help. If in hospital, ask them to call 2222 and bring the trolley
Start chest compression, and continue with cycles of 30 compressions to 2 rescue breaths.
- Compressions should be about 100/minute.
- Breaths. Do head tilt and chin lift. Pinch nose closed. Breath in. Mouth to mouth seal. Blow
steadily into mouth, watch for chest to rise. Take mouth away, watch for chest to fall.
- Using a bag-valve-mask: position tightly over the nose and mouth, cover with hands while
holding the airway open. The person doing compressions should squeeze the bag.
Peripheral pulses
Wash hands.
Introduce yourself, and ask permission to feel the peripheral pulses.
Feel one radial pulse, and time it for 15 or 20 secs.
- Report the rate, regularity, volume, symmetry (eg 68 per minute, basically regular with
slight sinus arrhythmia)
- Check it is symmetrical coarctation of the aorta
There is no need to time any other pulses.
Feel both brachial pulses, separately or together, whichever is easier.
Feel both carotid pulses: not at the same time. They are between the larynx/trachea and the
sterno-cleido-mastoid muscle.
Feel the dorsalis pedis arteries on both sides.
Feel the posterior tibial pulses on both sides. They are posterior to the medial malleolus. With
the patient lying down that means under the medial malleolus. They may be easier to feel if
you dorsiflex the foot slightly to stretch the artery.
Thank the patient and leave them comfortable.
Wash hands at end
Blood pressure
Wash hands.
Introduce yourself. Seek permission to take blood pressure. Explain briefly that it involves
inflating a cuff around the arm, and that it won’t hurt.
Locate the radial and brachial pulses.
Choose cuff. Use the standard size cuff, even on petite adults. Paediatric cuffs are smaller and
adult thigh cuffs are larger. Choose the standard one if there is a choice.
Put cuff on correctly: The tubes should be pointing down the arm. The soft velcro should be on
the inside, facing out. The hard velcro should be on the outside, facing in.
2. There is an arrow, which you can align with the brachial artery, but it is not vital.
Feel the radial pulse, while you pump up the cuff. Note the pressure when the pulse
disappears. This is roughly the systolic pressure.
Now either:
- let down the cuff, get your stethoscope in your ears, apply the diaphragm to the
antecubital fossa where you felt the brachial pulse,
- inflate the cuff about 20 mm above your estimate of the systolic, then start listening.
- Deflate the cuff slowly. The Korotkoff sounds should start as you are deflating: a single
sound per pulse. They are not heart sounds: don’t call them heart sounds.
- As you deflate further, they will change character, and then disappear.
- As you deflate, the appearance of the sounds indicates the systolic blood pressure, and
the disappearance corresponds to the diastolic blood pressure.
Or, if you are slick, after pumping up the cuff and feeling the radial pulse disappear, don’t deflate,
but immediately apply your stethoscope to the antecubital fossa, and start listening.
You should be able to state what you think the blood pressure is.
You should be able to state what the sounds you hear correspond to: ie the appearance and
disappearance of the sounds as you deflate the cuff correspond to the systolic and diastolic
blood pressure.
Thank the patient and leave them comfortable.
Wash hands at end
Cardiovascular system: general examination
Wash hands
Introduce yourself, and ask permission to “feel your pulse and listen to your heart” etc
patient should be exposed from the waist up and positioned at 45 degrees if possible
Assess the patient from the end of the bed:
- conscious state,
- general appearance,:
scars (old or recent) – check the back
pacemaker
colour and temp
ulcers on the feet
peripheral oedema
ascites
obvious breathing discomfort?
- equipment:
drips,/cannulae
ventilators,
tablets,
GTN spray,
oxygen mask,
catheter
- machine showing HR / BP / O2 sats, respiration
rate, urine output
1. General exam:
EYES and FACE:
look in eye mucosae pallor: anaemia
Xanthelasma: collection of cholesterol under the skin
around the eyes high cholesterol
Corneal arcus: greyish opacity around the cornea lipid
infiltration, hyperlipidaemia
Mitral facies: pinky/purply flush on the nose and cheeks
mitral valve disease
3. MOUTH
“stick your tongue out” central cyanosis, sore tongue or sore corners of mouth (angular
stomatitis) anaemia,
HANDS
Temperature, colour peripheral cyanosis
Capillary refill
Clubbing of the fingers heart disease
Splinter haemorrhage assoc. with endocarditis
Tendon xanthoma lipid deposition around tendons
Tar stains
Osler’s nodes: painful red lesions on the palms and soles infective endocarditis
Janeway lesions: non-tender, small erythematous or haemorrhagic lesions of the palms and
soles
PULSE and BP
Feel the radial pulse, time it, report rate and rhythm.
Report the character at a central pulse
- Slow rising: pulse is slow to rise and is flat aortic stenosis
- Collapsing pulse: aortic regurgitation. The incompetent valve allows the diastolic
pressure to fall dramatically. Felt more if the arm is raised over the head (radial pulse)
- Pulsus bigminus: two groups of heartbeats followed by a longer pause (second
weaker than the first)
- Pulsus paradoxus: an exaggeration of the normal variation in the pulse during the
inspiratory phase of respiration, in which the pulse becomes faster as one inhales
and slower as one exhales cardiac tamponade, constrictive pericarditis, severe
asthma and COPD.
Feel both radial pulses at once for symmetry.
You need not feel all the peripheral pulses.
You will be given the blood pressure.
check for bruits: auscultate for turbulent flow in the carotids.
2. Jugular Venous Pressure.
patient should be a 45 degrees if possible
head/chin tilted across to the left slightly
area needs good light
look for a venous pulsation of the internal jugular vein (double flicker). The IJV runs between
the two heads of sternocleidomastoid about 10 degrees from vertical. Normally just above
the clavicle.
Measure the jugular venous pulse:
- find the highest point of the flicker
- measure outwards from this position
- find the angle of louis/sternal angle.
- Measure the vertical distance from this angle and the tangent fro the flicker,
- Quoted as e.g. +5cm, or elevated 5cm.
4. *** make sure its not an arterial flicker:
- should be a double flicker, not a single
- not palpable
- will change with the position of the patient (A will not)
3. Apex beat
Palpate the chest for the apex beat (5th intercostal space in midclavicular line).
When you have located it, check its position by counting down the ribs, and see if it is in the
midclavicular line, anterior axillary line, etc.
4. Heaves and thrills
Palpate with a flat hand
Thrill: palpable murmur. Feels like a vibration
Heave: abnormally strong beating of the heart. Sign of ventricular hypertrophy
To time heart sounds, murmurs, thrills and bruits - use your nondominant fingers or thumb to
palpate the patient’s right carotid pulse whilst palpating or auscultating.
Sounds or thrills that occur with the pulse are SYSTOLIC. Before or after the pulse are
Diastolic.
5. Auscultation of the valves
Mitral – 5th L ICS, mid-clav line
Tricuspid – 4th L ICS, lower left sternal edge
Pulmonary – 2nd L ICS, sternal edge
Aortic – 2nd R ICS, sternal edge
You should hear the 2 hears sounds in each place. You may hear murmurs in one or more of
these places.
In one of these places, you should correlate the heart sounds with the pulse (carotid or radial).
Feel the ankles for oedema.
General Rules of cardiac examination
1. STENOSIS – The valve should be OPEN i.e. stenosis is the lesion of an open valve.
2. REGURGITATION – The valve should be CLOSED i.e. regurgitation is the lesion of a closed valve
3. Left sided valvular (Mitral and Aortic stenosis) initially leads to LV Hypertrophy (LVH); LVH leads
to an undisplaced, forceful, hyperdynamic apex beat
4. Left sided valvular regurgitation leads to LV Dilatation; Dilatation leads to a (often grossly)
displaced, diffuse apex beat
5. LEFT sided murmurs (M/A) get louder with EXPIRATION; RIGHT sided murmurs (T/P) in
INSPIRATION
Thank the patient and leave them comfortable.
Wash hands at end
ECG lead placement
P wave : atrial depolarisation.
QRS complex: ventricular depolarisation.
T wave: ventricular repolarisation.
An upward or positive movement means depolarisation travelling in the direction of the
positive terminal of the lead, or repolarisation travelling away from the positive terminal of the
lead.
5. Chest lead positioning
V1: right 4th ICS
V2: Left 4TH ics
V3: halfway between V2 and V4
V4: left 5th ICS, mid-clavicular line
V5: horizontal to V4, anterior axillary line
V6: horizontal to v5, mid-axillary line
You should be able to read the axis and
understand all this in terms of an axis diagram.
The leads:
Lead AVL: positive terminal on L arm,
negative terminal on R arm and leg. Axis –30.
Lead I: positive terminal on L arm, negative
terminal on R arm, axis 0
Lead AVR: positive terminal on R arm, negative terminal L arm and leg, axis –150
Lead II Positive terminal on leg, negative terminal on R arm, axis + 60
Lead AVF: positive terminal on leg, negative terminal on L and R arms, Axis +90
Lead III: positive terminal on leg, negative terminal on L arm, axis + 120.
Rate: you should be able to
calculate the heart rate from
an ECG.
Paper is 25mm/sec
Rhythm: if you are given an
ECG you should be able to
distinguish various rhythms,
including:
- Normal sinus rhythm, 1st, 2nd,
3rd degree ht. block, flutter,
and atrial fibrillation, atrial
or ventricular
- premature beats
(ectopics), ventricular
defibrillation.
6. Respiratory system: general examination
Wash hands. Introduce yourself, and ask permission to “listen to your breathing” or some such
non-specialist phrase.
Assess the patient from the end of the bed:
o Conscious state,
o General appearance (strained breathing, colour, bloated etc?)
o presence of drips, ventilators, tablets, sputum pots, oxygen mask, GTN spray etc.
1. General exam:
Look in eye mucosae pallor, anaemia
Look in the mouth –
o “Stick your tongue out” central cyanosis, sore smooth tongue (B12 deficiency),
sore corners of mouth (iron deficiency),
Look at hands
o Clubbing (pus in the chest, malignancy),
o Tobacco stains
o Colour, temperature of hands
Look for flapping tremor of CO2 retention.
o Ask patient to hold wrists extended (demonstrate)
o Look for coarse, irregular flapping tremor on sustained muscle contraction
o Sign of co2 retention
Observe for chest scars
2. Respiratory assessment
Feel the pulse: a strong “bounding” pulse is characteristic of CO2 retention.
Assess the respiratory rate and the use of accessory muscles of respiration. You will not have to
count it for a five-minute station.
Observe chest: one deep breath in and out. Symmetrical?
Palpate to see if the trachea is central
Chest expansion from front and back.
3. Percussion:
The sound should be dull over the rib, and more resonant over the intercostal space. If there is
fluid in the lung, the sound will be dull, and will be hyper-resonant in the presence of
emphysema or pneumothorax, where there is increased airspace.
4. Tactile vocal fremitus
At 3 or 4 levels anterior and posterior
Place ulnar aspects of hands flat over the chest
Ask patient to say ‘99’
Feel for resonance and dullness
5. Auscultation for breath sounds:
Same places at percussion.
Check for symmetrical breathing sounds
Are there additional sounds e.g. wheezing, crackling or sternal friction rub?
Normal sounds may be:
- Vesicular: where lung tissue is nearer to the stethoscope than main airways. Heard over
peripheral areas of the chest.
- Bronchical: where the main airways are nearer to the stethoscope than lung tissue (over
trachea etc).
Thank the patient and leave them comfortable.
Wash hands at end
7. Peak flow
Wash hands.
Introduce yourself, ask permission, and explain the purpose of the investigation.
Either demonstrate on the meter or “act out” the forceful expiration necessary to obtain a
peak flow reading. If you demonstrate it, you can fit a clean tube onto the apparatus
yourself, and then dispose of it afterwards.
Then ask the patient to do it him/herself. It is best to ask them to fit the tube themselves, and
then make sure it is disposed of afterwards.
Get them to do three expirations. Reset the meter to 0 each time. Take the best of three
readings. Get them to fit the nose clip if it is provided. Standing up is the standard position.
Interpretation. The normal range depends on the age, height, and sex of the subject. The
reading is usually interpreted with the aid of a nomogram. Typical conditions causing
reduced peak flow are bronchial asthma, chronic obstructive airways disease.
Thank the patient and leave them comfortable.
Vitalograph
Wash hands. Introduction. Permission. Explanation.
This is more sophisticated than peak flow. You will not be able to demonstrate it on the
apparatus, as the programming takes too long. You can “act out” what you want: a full
inspiration, breath out as fast as possible, until the lungs are as empty as possible.
Get them to fit the tube themselves, and make sure it is disposed of afterwards.
To reprogram the vitalograph after the last test:
- Switch off and on again using the “on” switch.
- On the little display, select “test” using the up and down arrow keys.
- Press enter
- Select “auto” on the display using the arrow keys
- Press “enter”.
- Fill in personal details using up and down arrow keys, pressing “enter” after each.
- Select FVC with up and down arrow keys.
- Press “enter” for test.
- Patient blows in as instructed: as hard and long as possible.
- Press up arrow for another test.
- Press down arrow for results.
You get Vital Capacity and FEV1 (forced expiratory volume in 1 second as a % of the vital
capacity as well as the peak flow.
The FEV1 and peak flow are reduced in a bronchial asthma attack. Vital capacity more or
less normal.
Vital capacity is reduced with more or less normal FEV1 in pulmonary fibrosis, lobar
pneumonia, pleural effusion, pneumothorax.
Chronic obstructive airway disease reduces both.
Thank the patient and leave them comfortable.
Abdominal examination
Wash hands. Introduce yourself, ask permission to “examine your abdomen” or some such
phrase.
Assess the patient from the end of the bed:
o conscious state,
o general appearance (obvious discomfort, guarding)
o drips, nasogastric tube, tablets, special diet etc.
In most “examination OSCE” stations you are not expected to take any history, but in
“abdo” you can ask if the patient is in any pain.
Lie the patient flat if possible, exposed form the xiphoid to the pubis
8. 1. General examination:
Eyes: look for pallor and jaundice. Xanthalasma.
Mouth: sore tongue, sore corners of mouth - may indicate B12 or Fe deficiency respectively,
Hands:
Clubbing assoc. with vascular disease
palmar erythema, portal hypertension
leukonychia: white discolouration of the nails
hypoalbuminaemia, cirrhosis
Dupuytren’s contracture cirrhosis
Liver flap (coarse tremor)
Skin in general:
spider naevi.
Dehydration gives low turgor.
Lymph nodes.
Ideally do all LN, but a 5 min station leaves you
short of time.
Do supraclavicular: Virchow’s node.
Abdo: inspect for striae, distension, prominent veins round umbilicus, bruising, asymmetry,
visible peristalsis.
Ask if in pain, ask the patient to give a little cough, and ask if it hurts
9. 2. Sit down to do abdominal exam.
Two sets of palpations – superficial, then deeper
If the patient is in pain, palpate the opposite side first
Press with a flat hand, feel for any obvious masses
Gently palpate the nine areas in turn
3. Liver
Start in the right iliac fossa
Ask patient to take a deep breath in and out, sweep the hand upwards to meet the
descension of the liver (lower margin)
Percuss down from the fifth ICS til the sounds become duller (to find the top margin) and
upwards from the groin to find the lower margin
4. spleen
Begin in the right iliac fossa, palpate upwards in a diagonal direction towards the left
hypochondrium
Ask the patient to take deep breaths in and out
Place on hand on the costal margin, and sweep with the other
Spleen needs to be 2-3 times enlarged before it can be palpated
5. kidneys
Place one hand underneath the loin (around T12/L1), and the other hand on top
Feel between the hands (“ballot”) for any enlargment
6. Auscultation
Listen in one area for approx 15seconds (OSCE) for bowel sounds
Note any hyperactivity, absence or tinkling
7. Percussion
For ascites (shifting dullness).
Percuss up the abdomen until dullness felt.
Roll the patient towards you. If there is ascites, a bubble should form (area of resonance)
where there was previously dullness
Thank the patient and leave them comfortable.
Wash hands at end
10. PNS exam – motor function
wash hands, introduction, consent and explanation – “I’d like to examine your arms and legs”
1. Observation:
Check for any obvious signs, scarring around the joints etc
Ask if any pain or stiffness in muscles or joints etc.
2. Bulk:
check for wasting by comparing bulk on both sides e.g. arms, thighs, neck, shoulder, calf etc.
can be a sign of disuse atrophy (dennervation), malnutrition, motor-neuron disease or lesion
(UMN/LMN).
3. Tone:
test tone across the major joints:
- upper limb: shake hands
- lower limb: straight leg, shake knee (look for movement in the foot)
- pick up and drop knee, heel should stay on the bed.
Hypertonia: increased tone, may be due to UMN lesion.
Hypotonia: reduced tone, may be due to LMN lesion.
11. 4. Motor/Power:
Movement Roots
tested
Patient action Examiner action
Upper limb
Shoulder Abduction C4, C5 Make wings out Push medially
Adduction C6, C7 Make wings at side Push laterally
Elbow Extension C7, C8 Slightly bent extended arm Try to force flexion
Flexion C5, C6 Elbows flexed Try to force extension
Wrist Dorsiflexion C7, C8 Flat hand Try to push down
Palmarflexion C7, C8 Flat hand Try to push up
Fingers Abduction T1 Spread fingers Try to force close
Adduction T1 Hold card/paper between
fingers
Try to pull card/paper out
Thumb Opposition T1 Make an “O” with fingers and
thumb
Try to pull apart
Abduction T1 Flat hand, palm up, thumb
pointing superiorly
Try to push down
Lower limb
Hip Flexion L1, L2 Hold knees up to the chest Try to pull back
Extension L4, L5 Flex the knee Try to push knees to the chest
Knee Flexion L5, S1 Slightly flex the knee Try to extend the knee
Extension L2, L3 Slightly flex the knee Try to force flexion
Ankle Dorsiflexion L4, L5 Point foot to the sky Try to push foot downwards
Plantarflexion S1, S2 Point toes to the floor Try to push anterior part of
the foot superiorly
Foot Inversion - Try to touch soles of feet
together
Try to push lateral part of the
foot laterally
Eversion - Examiner puts into a slightly
everted position
Try to push lateral part of the
foot medially
5. Co-ordination:
Upper limb – finger-nose test
Ask patient to touch your finger held out in front of the so that they have to fully extend, and
then to touch the tip of the nose
Ask then to repeat several times as quickly as possible
Lower limb – Heel-shin test
Show the patient how to complete the movement of running the back of the heel up/down
the shin, lift up and then repeat.
Repeat as quickly as possible.
6. Reflexes
Reflex Roots
tested
method Desired result
Upper limb
Biceps C5. C6 Finger placed on the tendon at the cubital
fossa, and struck with a patellar hammer
Activation of stretch
receptors, slight flexion
of the elbow
Triceps C7, C8 Arm relaxed at a right angle, tendon tapped
above the olecranon fossa.
Activation of stretch
receptors, slight
extension of the elbow
Supinator C5, C6 Strike the lower end of the radius just above the
wrist
Flexion of the elbow.
May cause finger
flicker.
12. Lower limb
Patellar L3, L4 Use a patellar hammer to tap the patellar
tendon to initiate the reflex. Can be done sitting
on the edge of the bed or lying down with one
arm supporting a slightly flexed knee from
underneath.
Knee jerk.
Achillies S1, S2 Tap the calconeal tendon with a patellar
hammer while the foot is dorsiflexed
Jerking of the foot
(plantarflexion)
Babinski
(plantar)
Run the lower end of a patella hammer (or
similar) up the lateral side of the sole of the foot
and across the ball medially.
The smaller toes will
flare upwards, the
great toe will initially
flex, then extend.
Reflexes alone. The station will state which ones.
Wash hands. Introduce and explain, ask permission.
Inspect for wasting, fasciculation, assymmetry. Tell the examiner as you do it.
The full possible number of reflexes is biceps, triceps, supinator, quadriceps (patellar
tendon), and ankle jerk (achilles tendon). You will not be asked to do the Babinski.
Do each reflex twice, and proceed symmetrically: do one biceps, then the other, do one
triceps, then the other. Etc.
- Biceps reflexes: feel for biceps tendon with your finger, hit your finger with hammer.
Patient should be relaxed, with elbow flexed. Feel tendon tighten under your finger, see
muscle contract.
- Triceps reflex: hold the patient’s hand, supporting the weight of the flexed arm. Hit the
triceps tendon directly with the hammer. Feel forearm move as elbow extends, see
triceps muscle contract
- Supinator: Hold the patient’s hand, hit over radius, about 1/3 way up forearm from wrist.
Feel arm move, see muscle contract.
- Quadriceps: feel between patella and tibial tuberosity, hit tendon directly
- Ankle jerk: Hold foot in neutral position. Hit Achilles tendon with hammer. Feel and see
foot plantiflexes.
People differ in how easy these reflexes are to elicit. Symmetry is important in deciding if
anything is wrong.
Wash hands at end
Cranial Nerve Exam
I Olfactory Some Smell – asked
II Optic Say Vision – accommodation, consensual pupillary reflex,
visual fields
III Occulomotor Money Most muscles moving the eye, except lateral rectus
and superior oblique
IV Trochlear Matters Superior oblique
V Trigeminal But Assessed using the mandibular branch – muscles of
mastication
VI Abducens My Lateral rectus
VII Facial Boyfriend Muscles of facial expression
VIII Vestibulocochlear Says Not assessed in this document
IX Glossopharyngeal Big Gag reflex - Not assessed
X Vagus Boobs Palatal elevation
XI Accessory Matter Strength of sternocleidomastoid and trapezius
XII Hypoglossal More Tongue symmetry and movement
13. Wash hands, obtain consent, explain procedure.
1. Observe
for asymmetry in the face, drooping eyes (ptosis) weakness on one side of the face.
2. Olfaction (I):
Ask if they have noticed any loss/reduction in sense of smell or taste recently?
3. Vision (II):
Test acuity using a snellen chart (with any corrective glasses/lenses)
Confrontation: Compare the patient’s visual fields with your own, using the ‘wiggling
finger’ method
Direct and consensual pupillary light reflexes
Convergence: look at distant point, then finger at closer proximity
Size and symmetry of pupils:
o Dilated: mydriasis
o Constricted: miosis
Fundoscopy
Test colour vision using an Ishihara chart
4. Extra-occular movements (III, IV, VI):
Draw an H in the air, ask patient to follow with eyes. Ask if any double vision.
Check for drooping, unopposed down and/or outward looking (3rd nerve palsy)
Check for nystagmus
ABducens Abducts (lateral rectus)
5. Muscles of mastication (V):
Ask to tightly close jaw, and try to open at the chin
Ask to open the jaw, does it open evenly?
‘Jaw jerk’ – half open mouth, tap chin. Lesions may show exaggerated reflex.
6. Facial expression (VII):
Observe face for symmetry
Ask to smile with teeth
Blow cheeks out and push gently
Shut eyes tightly, gently try to open
Look to the ceiling, look for brow symmetry (UMN/LMN palsy)
**Rinnie’s and Weber’s tests for vestibulocochlear function are absent from this document**
7. Palatal elevation (X):
Say ‘g, g, g’ and ‘ck, ck, ck’
Say ‘ahhh’, and observe soft palate. Should move upwards sharply and
symmetrically. Will move away from a lesion.
8. Sternocleidomastoid and trapezius (XI):
Hold hand up, ask to press side of face into the hand
If lying down, put hand on forehead, ask to push head against hand.
Ask to shrug shoulders, look for weakness, then try to push down.
9. Motor to the tongue (XII):
Observe the tongue in the mouth, look for wasting and fasciulations
Stick tongue out, tongue will move towards the lesioned side
Ask to move tongue in both directions
Push tongue against cheek
Push tongue against cheek against finger.
14. Thyroid exam
Wash hands and obtain consent “may I examine you to see how your thyroid is working?”
Grave’s triad:
Acropachy:
Exophthalmos
Pretibia myxoedema
Signs of hyper and hypo:
Hyperthyroidism Hypothyroidism
High BMR Low BMR
Weight loss Tiredness/lethargy
Increased appetitie Weight gain
Irritability Cold intolerance
High freq tremor Goitre
Heat intolerance Mental slowness
Tachycardia Dry, thin hair and skin
Warm, vasodilated peripheries bradycardia
Exopthalmos depression
goitre
Anxiety, agitation
1. Hands
Acropachy: clubbing of the fingers and toes with soft tissue swelling occurring in patients
with thyrotoxicosis
Fine tremor: spread fingers, or use piece of paper
Turn hands over:
o Dry/cool: hypo
o Hot/sweaty: hyper
Palmar erythema: thyrotoxicosis
Onycholysis: painless separation of the finger nail from the nailbed: hypert
2. Face/eyes
Hypo: puffy, dry Hyper: thin, maybe sweaty
Lid lag: look at finger as it moves up and down. Lid will lag behind eye movement
Exophthalmos: look from above, may be subtle.
May be a cranial nerve palsy (medial and lateral rectus) – H test
Hair: dry and brittle in hyper; may be hair loss in hypo
Other
ASK: has there been any unexplained weight loss or gain recently?
Is the patient appropriately dressed for the environment?
Proximal myopathy: resisted arm abduction and ‘cross arms, then stand’ manoeuvre
15. 3. Pulse/BP
Tachy/Bradycardia
High/low bp
4. Neck exam
A. anterior assessment
Auscultate for a bruit over the goitre (increased vascularity)
Is there a mass?
Are there any scars from neck surgery?
Ask the patient to take a sip of water, hold it in the mouth, then swallow. The mass should rise
and fall with the larynx.
Ask the patient to stick out their tongue: if it is a thyroglossal cyst, the mass will move
upwards with the tongue protrusion
B. Posterior assessment
Palpate from behind: define the shape, size, borders, smoothness of surface, symmetry
Repeat the water test while palpating
Can you palpate below it? If not, percuss the upper sternum for dullness (retro-sternal goitre)
Palpate the local cervical lymph nodes
Lymph nodes of the neck
16. Axillary lymph nodes
Shoulder joint exam
Rotator cuff muscles
Supraspinatus: abducts the arm the first 15 degrees
Infraspinatsus: external rotation
Teres minor: external rotation
Subscapularis: internal rotation
1. Questioning
Ask if there is any pain in the joint or muscles
Ask if there are any particular movements they find painful/uncomfortable/impossible
Has the patient ever had surgery/fracture/dislocation?
2. LOOK
Patient should be in the anatomical position where possible
Are there any obvious deformities?
o Dislocated shoulder: dropped arm, loss of rounded contour of the shoulder
o Winged scapula: Ask the patient to hold their arms out in front of them hands
together. Or, get them to push against a wall
Muscle wasting/asymmetry
Presence of scars
Signs of inflammation: swelling, redness
17. 3. FEEL
Feel along the clavicle, comparing sides (SCJ ACJ) and acromion
Feel along the spine of the scapula
Feel for swelling, warmth, tenderness, bulk
4. MOVE
Active movement
o external rotation: Hands behind the head
o Internal rotation: Hands up and behind back
o Flexion/Extension: Arms up then down
o Abduction/adduction: Arms crossed, then out laterally
Passive movement
o Carry out the above movements for the patient
o Feel the joint for crepitus while moving it
Resisted movement
External rotation
Copeland test
Internal rotation
5. SPECIAL TESTS
Frozen shoulder:
o Thickening and contracting of the capsule
o Pain on external rotation with abduction?
Supraspinatus Subacromial impingement:
o Empty can/Copeland’s test: Internal rotation
when abducted = pain. Relieved when the arm
is externally rotated
AC joint:
o Scarf test: This test is positive when it revives the
acromioclavicular pain.
Painful arc
o Pain in ~80 degree abduction, not pain
above or below this.
***test the joint above and below***
Scarf test
18. Hip joint exam
1. Questioning
Ask if there is any pain in the joint or muscles
Ask if there are any particular movements they find painful/uncomfortable/impossible
Has the patient ever had surgery/fracture/dislocation?
2. LOOK
Observe the gait (is it antalgic?)
Signs of inflammation
Scars
Symmetry of position, alignment and muscle bulk
Fractured hip: External rotation and leg shortening
Dislocated hip: Internal rotation and leg shortening
3. FEEL
Patient should lie flat if possible
Feel for the greater trochanter – is there pain? May be an avulsion fracture
Measure the leg length
o True leg length: ASIS to the medial malleolus
o Apparent leg length: umbilicus to the medial malleolus
4. MOVE
Test passive, active and resisted movement
Internal rotation - with knee and hip both flexed at 90 degrees the ankle is abducted.
External rotation - with knee and hip both flexed at 90 degrees the ankle is adducted.
Flexion
Extension - done with the patient on their side.
Abduction - assessed whilst palpating the contralateral ASIS.
Adduction - assessed whilst palpating the ipsilateral ASIS.
5. SPECIAL TESTS
Thomas’ test for a hidden flexion contracture
o Place a hand behind the lumbar spine
o Getting the patient to fully flex the contralateral hip until the lumbar spine is flat
o If the other leg starts to lift as well = fixed flexion deformity
Trendelenberg’s:
o Tests the abductors of the hip (gluteal muscles and nerves)
o Ask the patient to stand and lift (flex) one leg
o The pelvis should stay balanced. If there is a tip to one side, then the abductors of
the contralateral hip are weak.
*** test joint above and below***