Anterior Drawer Test of the Ankle | Chronic Ankle Laxity & Anterior Talofibular Ligament Rupture
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- Опубликовано: 22 июл 2024
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This is not medical advice. The content is intended as educational content for health care professionals and students. If you are a patient, seek care of a health care professional. The anterior drawer test has limited diagnostic ability for chronic ankle laxity but performs well in an acute situation to diagnose ruptures of the anterior talofibular ligament commonly injured after ankle inversion trauma
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ARTICLES:
Croy (2013): www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2...
Van Dijk (1996): www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9...
Miller (2016): www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2...
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3 years into PT school, still watching your videos regularly. They are perfect.
You guys are saving my life with all these special tests :). I have a special test quiz tomorrow and these videos are such a huge help! Thank you!
Thank you for providing scholarly articles! It helped with my research on ankle instability!🙏🏼
I REALLY like how you showed the laxities when you were talking about how the test can be positive. I am more of a visual learner, so seeing the actual abnormalities is very useful! Thank you!
We try to visualize everything as good as possible! Glad you like it and thanks for following us!
Excellent work guys,keep it up!
youd video is so fabulous.my all batchmates seeing your videos during viva practical its soo helpful
action happens at 1:40
Thank you for your efforts ❤
Thanks for showing how the positive test looks like!
Ur welcome Priyesha!
Amazing explanation 😀
Amazing vedio
So much better to see it in motion versus reading it in a text
Absolutely 😀 glad you found it helpful
You mentioned ADT is good in acute stage but not in chronic. You know which test to use in chronic ?
heard a loud pop in shoulder blade area. Any idea what this may be ?
If the ligaments are stretched or torn does that make the peroneal tendons loose? And is that an issue?
can you tell me why did you plantarflex the ankle and flex the knee?
Thanks alot sir..
Love u guys
Excellent
This video is amazing! Thanks for uploading them. 22/12/2018 😃😃
nice
How rest? Anterior tibiofibular ligament is thickened-chronic sprain. Recovery time???? Plz reply?
How to heal this?
Atfl chronic sprain recovary time?
I love ur teaching
thanks Pallabi!
Massive thanx for needful video Sir.
you're welcome!
You're welcome, thanks for subscribing!
I might have missed it but does the article say anything about when the acute situation becomes a chronic laxity? Is it only based on the average time that connective tissue needs to heal or also on other things?
The article doesn't say anything about that, but have a look at this: journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.3113/FAI.2007.0343
Hello @Physiotutors I didnt manage to understand the last part where u mentioned about subtle detection of ankle instability from the cadaver study.
So how would ankle instability be detected with inversion of intact deltoid ligament? What should the therapist be feeling for?
Anterior translation is increased in case the anterior talofibular ligament is ruptured
Please i need help
I use my index finger of the fixating hand to palpate the talocrural jointline. I feel this makes it easier to test for anterior glide of the talocrural joint.
Definitely a good remark Stefan to potentially make this test more reliably and valid!Thx
How does ATFL rupture affect motor strength when testing for inversion, eversion etc? Is there a specific gait pattern noted with this?
Pain always reduces motor output. Inversion will be painful at end-range. Like with every injury our body tries to protect the painful body part by making it stiff. So you will most likely see reduced dorsi and plantarflexion during gait.
Hi, I have ATFL and CFL rupture. Now ultrasound indicates CFL has recovered, but ATFL is still torn. My doc gave me the drawer test and it turned out it is quite stable. Any suggestions? Thanks!!!
That's good news. Focus should be on function anyways. There are quite a lot of people with high degrees of mechanical instability, but who have good function depite
These videos really are very helpful, but they are also aesthetically appealing. His foot is extraordinarily beautiful: long and muscular, ideal for sculpture modeling! His long, slender toes almost look like fingers! Wow. I would go as far as saying that he has the most beautiful feet I've encountered online.
hello, just i have 2 question:
why you flex the knee during performing the test ?
why you perform the test in 10 to 15 degree of plantar flexion ?
The knee is flexed in the second position to place the foot on the table.
10 - 15° of plantar flexion is the maximally loose packed position (the position with the least capsular tension): allows for maximal translation
@@Physiotutors ok thank u so much
God willing i will have ortho exam after two days i wish i well done this exam ✌🏻 thank u so much allah bless u
Good luck!!
tysm we love u
You're welcome 😊
is this more reliable than the prone version?
Don't know the prone version, but we'd have to have studies investigating the reliability of both versions to really be able to tell!
Why should we have to mantain ankle in 15° plantarflexion ?
its the MLPP (maximally lose packed position) of the Talocrural joint. 10-15° plantarflexion
Is this planter flexion or Dorsi ?!
10 degrees of plantar flexion
Its been a yeasr sinceI had my ankle ligament tear and there is still a lot of pain and I have tried everything except the surgery I am should go for surgery or not or any other treatment
Impossible to say from afar. We'd recommend you to get in touch with our partners from www.yourphysio.online to get individualized advice!
❤️
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1:26
Bro went to teaching. And speaking a whole bunch of numbers
🤙
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01:23
lol Andreas you hangover bro?
or having a cold
Haha, hungover can't be - Andreas doesn't drink a sip of alcohol!
Kai tries to compensate for that though!;)
Jesus H. What's that they say about big feet? Or, maybe you have tiny hands!
Haha, I know that I got huge feet!;) Hands are equally big though
Huge feet, more smell... 🤪🤪
Aaaeee ganja
DRAW, not drawer (sorry to be a pedant...)
Official test name is anterior drawer test
@@Physiotutors "Official" is incorrect, sorry. We "draw" one bone toward us while fixing another. It is a verb, not somewhere to keep your socks and undies 😉
@@TerryBoydPhoto The test does indeed refer to a "drawer" where you keep your socks and undies.
In German it's called "Schubladen" test or in Dutch "schuiflade".
@@Physiotutors Poor grammar notwithstanding, huh? I don't recall the ADT, for either ankle or knee, as being a German or Dutch test. I always assumed US or British (for no good reason). But as I've said, we don't "drawer" something towards us. We draw it towards us: it is drawn. Thus, one is correct English and the other is not.
Terry, do you have any medical background or knowledge? The actual name of the test is "Anterior Drawer Test" not anterior draw test. He is saying it correctly.