Posterior Pelvic Pain Provocation Test: Difference between revisions
m (Created page with "{{subst:Special Test}}") |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
<div class="editorbox"> | <div class="editorbox"> | ||
'''Original Editor '''- | '''Original Editor '''- Els Van haver | ||
'''Lead Editors''' - Your name will be added here if you are a lead editor on this page. [[Physiopedia:Editors|Read more.]] | '''Lead Editors''' - Your name will be added here if you are a lead editor on this page. [[Physiopedia:Editors|Read more.]] | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
<br> | |||
== Purpose == | |||
The Pelvic Pain Provocation Test is also known as: | |||
*PPPP- test | |||
*P4-test | |||
*Thigh Trust test | |||
*Shear Force Test<br> | |||
== Technique<br> == | == Technique<br> == |
Revision as of 17:31, 16 November 2011
Original Editor - Els Van haver
Lead Editors - Your name will be added here if you are a lead editor on this page. Read more.
Purpose[edit | edit source]
The Pelvic Pain Provocation Test is also known as:
- PPPP- test
- P4-test
- Thigh Trust test
- Shear Force Test
Technique
[edit | edit source]
Describe how to carry out this assessment technique here
Evidence[edit | edit source]
Provide the evidence for this technique here
Resources[edit | edit source]
add any relevant resources here
Recent Related Research (from Pubmed)[edit | edit source]
Extension:RSS -- Error: Not a valid URL: Feed goes here!!|charset=UTF-8|short|max=10
References[edit | edit source]
References will automatically be added here, see adding references tutorial.