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Specificity of the Femoral Slump Test for the Assessment of Experimentally Induced Anterior Knee Pain Weng-Hang Lai, MS, Yi-Fen Shih, PhD, Pei-Ling Lin, MS, Wen-Yin Chen, PhD, Hsiao-Li Ma, MD Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Volume 93, Issue 12, Pages (December 2012) DOI: /j.apmr Copyright © 2012 American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine Terms and Conditions
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Fig 1 Testing procedures. (A) FST before injection and (B) after injection. Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation , DOI: ( /j.apmr ) Copyright © 2012 American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine Terms and Conditions
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Fig 2 (A) Location of the experimentally induced anterior knee pain, (B) the time course of pain intensity, and (C) pain diameter, after the injection of hypertonic saline solution in the infrapatellar fat pad. Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation , DOI: ( /j.apmr ) Copyright © 2012 American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine Terms and Conditions
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Fig 3 Percentage of subjects manifesting pain level change after the application of (A) neck flexion and (B) neck extension. Subjects received 3 trials of testing for both neck flexion and extension structure differential maneuver. If a subject reported a decrease of pain in 2 or more trials out of 3, then the subject was in the pain decrease category. Same principle was applied to the pain unchanged and pain increase categories. Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation , DOI: ( /j.apmr ) Copyright © 2012 American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine Terms and Conditions
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