Motion Testing: Sidebending and Rotation from the Forward Bent Position -- If a right facet does not open normally, but the left does open normally, right sidebending will be possible but left sidebending will be restricted in the forward bent position. In the cervical spine during flexion/extension, sidebending and rotation are coupled movements in the same direction. Therefore, rotation will also be affected by facet joint dysfunction. If the right facet does not open normally, we would expect to encounter abnormal resistance with left to right translation in the forward bent position. The segment is said to be restricted in flexion, rotation left, and sidebending left. The positional diagnosis is ERSright, and the motion restriction is FRSleft.

Example -- While monitoring a typical cervical segment at the articular pillars, you flex the cervical segment by rotating the patients head forward and forward bending the neck down to the level of the segment that is to be tested. You notice that the finger you have placed upon the left articular pillar moves slightly superior and anterior, but the finger monitoring the right articular pillar does not move (or if it does move, it moves less than the right side). You also notice that you encounter abnormal resistance when you translate the segment from left to right. When you extend the patients cervical spine, you note that both fingers monitoring the articular pillars move symmetrically, slightly posterior and inferior, and that you encounter normal translational resistance in both directions. We know that in extension the facets are supposed to close, and that in flexion the facets are supposed to open.

We conclude that the segment is restricted in flexion, rotation left, sidebending left . The positional diagnosis is ERSright, and the motion restriction is (FRSleft). Click here to visualize this type of dysfunction from a -- side view -- back view -- top view) .