Guys can I just confirm that at the end when you are finding neutral, that you have actually identified significant retroversion as the hip is positioned in some relative external rotation, rather than normal anteversion, as this would be in some relative internal rotation
If you are a grown adult, there’s no way to fix it besides some sort of surgical intervention, which is not common. You can however learn to compensate for it.
Ig it is talking about how reliable it is if one assess it and then another physio does the second time, methods vary but it is reliable if its one physio only
ALL your vidéos are awesome. I used them frequently as physiothérapist. Thanks !
Thanks a lot for the gesture Tommy! Happy to hear your positive feedback
Can craig's test be modified to supine position at the edge of bed if the patient is not available for prone?
what is inclinometer app you use on phone during test?
Very eye opening 😮
I have one twice as much as the other.
Nice explanation...thank you sir from India
So how do we increase external ROM?
Thank you
Guys can I just confirm that at the end when you are finding neutral, that you have actually identified significant retroversion as the hip is positioned in some relative external rotation, rather than normal anteversion, as this would be in some relative internal rotation
how do i fix this?
If you are a grown adult, there’s no way to fix it besides some sort of surgical intervention, which is not common. You can however learn to compensate for it.
Would you say a hip is more anteverted if the greater trochanter is most prominent with hip IR?
Theoreticaly Yes
So goniometry measurement is unreliable???
Ig it is talking about how reliable it is if one assess it and then another physio does the second time, methods vary but it is reliable if its one physio only