You are evaluating your 27-year-old male patient who presented to your office with a complaint of lower back pain, and you have completed your history. You are performing your physical and osteopathic structural examination, and as you ask your standing patient to bend one knee at a time, allowing the ipsilateral innominate to drop inferiorly (or lower), you find an asymmetry of motion between the sides. He can easily bend his right knee, allowing his right innominate to lower. However, when you ask him to bend his left knee, he has limited motion, and the innominate does not lower very much. What is the name of this particular test, and what other anatomical region are you assessing with this test?

You are evaluating your 27-year-old male patient who presented to your office with a complaint of lower back pain, and you have completed your history. You are performing your physical and osteopathic structural examination, and as you ask your standing patient to bend one knee at a time, allowing the ipsilateral innominate to drop inferiorly (or lower), you find an asymmetry of motion between the sides. He can easily bend his right knee, allowing his right innominate to lower. However, when you ask him to bend his left knee, he has limited motion, and the innominate does not lower very much. What is the name of this particular test, and what other anatomical region are you assessing with this test?



A. Hip Drop test, hip joint involvement
B. Hip Drop test, lumbar involvement
C. Hip Drop test, sacral involvement
D. Stinchfield test, hip joint involvement
E. Stinchfield test, lumbar involvement


Answer: B


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Biomechanics

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