Muscle palpation with controlled finger pressure: new equipment for the study of tender myofascial tissues
- 1 November 1994
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Pain
- Vol. 59 (2) , 235-239
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0304-3959(94)90076-0
Abstract
While manual palpation is the most important method for evaluation of tender myofascial tissues, it lacks reliability. Therefore, we have developed an instrument, called a 'palpometer', which allows the measurement of pressure exerted during palpation. The palpometer consists of a thin pressure-sensitive plastic device attached to the palpating finger, and of a scale recording the pressure applied to the device. Known forces were applied to the pressure sensitive device under various experimental conditions and the corresponding values were read on the palpometer scale. Then 14 observers, blinded to the palpometer scale, palpated the temporal muscle on the same subject twice, with an interval of 1 week. A highly significant correlation was found between palpometer recordings and forces applied to the pressure-sensitive device (P < 0.0001). Exerted force at a given palpometer value varied 3.1% within and 7.2% between 2 observers. During palpation of the temporal muscle pressure intensities within the 14 observers did not differ significantly from week to week (P = 0.68). Between the 14 observers pressure intensities varied considerably with a range of 73.5-196 arbitrary units. Thus, a reliable instrument for measuring pressure intensities during palpation of myofascial tissue has been developed. The large variation in palpation pressures between observers indicates that palpation of tender myofascial tissue may be considerably improved by use of the palpometer. This instrument will be indispensable in research studies employing palpation and in the training of physicians to diagnose myofascial pain disorders.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- The use of electromyography and muscle palpation in the diagnosis of tension-type headache with and without pericranial muscle involvementPain, 1992
- Cephalic muscle tenderness and pressure pain threshold in a general populationPain, 1992
- Muscle Tenderness in Tension Headache Treated with Acupuncture or PhysiotherapyCephalalgia, 1990
- The american college of rheumatology 1990 criteria for the classification of fibromyalgiaArthritis & Rheumatism, 1990
- Pressure pain thresholds, clinical assessment, and differential diagnosis: reliability and validity in patients with myogenic painPain, 1989
- Pericranial Tenderness in Tension Headache: A Blind, Controlled StudyCephalalgia, 1987
- A randomized, controlled trial of amitriptyline and naproxen in the treatment of patients with fibromyalgiaArthritis & Rheumatism, 1986
- Pressure-pain threshold in human temporal region. Evaluation of a new pressure algometerPain, 1986
- Evaluation of pericranial tenderness and oral function in patients with common migraine, muscle contraction headache and ‘combination headache’Pain, 1982
- Prevalence and Significance of Muscle Tenderness During Common Migraine AttacksHeadache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain, 1981