Froment sign
Appearance
(Redirected from Froment's sign)
Froment sign | |
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Positive Froment sign (below) | |
Differential diagnosis | palsy of the ulnar nerve |
Froment sign is a special test of the wrist for palsy of the ulnar nerve, specifically, the action of adductor pollicis.[1]
Process of examination
[edit]To perform the test, a patient is asked to hold an object, usually a flat object such as a piece of paper, between the thumb and index finger (pinch grip). The examiner then attempts to pull the object out of the subject's hands.[2]
- A normal individual will be able to maintain a hold on the object without difficulty.
- However, with ulnar nerve palsy, the patient will experience difficulty maintaining a hold using the adductor pollicis. They will instead use the flexor pollicis longus of the thumb to grip the paper causing a flexion of the interphalangeal joint.[3]
- Froment sign is the flexion of the interphalangeal joint of the thumb rather than adduction of the entire thumb.
- Note that the flexor pollicis longus is nearly always innervated by the anterior interosseous branch of the median nerve.
- Simultaneous hyperextension of the thumb MCP joint is indicative of ulnar nerve compromise. This is also known as Jeanne's sign.[2]
Eponym
[edit]It is named after French neurologist Jules Froment.[4][5]
References
[edit]- ^ "Ulnar Nerve - Wheeless' Textbook of Orthopaedics". Retrieved 2008-01-26.
- ^ a b Jeff G. Konin et al. Special Tests for Orthopedic Examination: Third Edition. Thorofare, NJ. SLACK Incorporated, 2006.
- ^ Richardson, Craig and Fabre, Gerd. '"Froment's Sign." Journal of Audiovisual Media in Medicine. Vol. 26, No. 1 (2003):34.
- ^ synd/1970 at Who Named It?
- ^ Froment, J. (1915). "La préhension dans les paralysies du nerf cubital et le signe du pouce". La Presse Médicale. 23. Paris: 409.