The Piriformis Test assesses whether hip positioning or resisted movement reproduces familiar buttock or sciatic-type symptoms. A positive finding may increase suspicion of deep gluteal space involvement when it matches the client’s symptoms and other findings. Current 2020+ evidence supports a broader deep gluteal syndrome diagnostic pathway rather than relying on one test alone.
A client reports buttock pain that worsens with sitting and sometimes refers down the back of the thigh. Lumbar screening does not clearly reproduce symptoms, and deep gluteal palpation is tender. A Piriformis Test or FAIR-style position may help assess whether posterior hip positioning reproduces familiar symptoms.
Modern sources often prefer the broader term deep gluteal syndrome because sciatic nerve irritation in the deep gluteal space may involve structures beyond the piriformis muscle.
Test name: Piriformis Test
Related test: FAIR Test
Body region: Posterior hip, buttock and deep gluteal space
Purpose: Assess buttock or sciatic-type symptom response during piriformis/deep gluteal loading
Commonly associated with: Deep gluteal syndrome or piriformis-related sciatic nerve irritation
Positive finding: Reproduction of familiar buttock pain, posterior thigh symptoms or sciatic-type symptoms
Negative finding: No familiar symptoms during the test
Best used with: Lumbar screen, Slump Test, Straight Leg Raise, palpation, hip ROM, Pace sign and seated piriformis tests
Key limitation: Does not confirm piriformis syndrome or deep gluteal syndrome on its own
The Piriformis Test is a provocative posterior hip test. Depending on the variation, the hip is placed into flexion, adduction and internal rotation, or the client performs resisted movement that loads the piriformis and deep gluteal region.
The purpose is to reproduce familiar buttock or posterior thigh symptoms, not simply to create a stretch.
It is used when posterior hip, buttock or sciatic-type symptoms may be related to deep gluteal structures.
It may help guide further assessment of lumbar spine, hip, neural mobility and local posterior hip sensitivity.
The test assesses symptom response to piriformis/deep gluteal loading. It does not isolate the piriformis muscle or confirm sciatic nerve entrapment.
This test may be useful for clients with buttock pain, sitting-related symptoms, posterior thigh symptoms, running-related posterior hip pain or suspected deep gluteal symptom behaviour.
Use when symptoms suggest posterior hip or deep gluteal involvement and lumbar screening has been considered.
Use caution with highly irritable neural symptoms, severe radiating pain, neurological signs, recent trauma, acute hip injury, significant night pain or symptoms that worsen rapidly.
Treatment table
Pain scale
Measurz recording workflow
Optional neurological screen notes
Optional lumbar screen notes
Choose the variation being used, such as side-lying FAIR-style positioning or supine flexion/adduction/internal rotation.
The client lies supine or side-lying depending on the protocol.
Stand beside the tested hip.
Support the knee and ankle or lower leg.
Stabilise the pelvis to reduce trunk rotation and avoid uncontrolled hip movement.
Move the hip into flexion, adduction and internal rotation, or apply resisted movement according to the selected variation.
Ask the client to report buttock pain, posterior thigh symptoms, tingling, numbness, burning, stretch and whether symptoms are familiar.
Reproduction of familiar buttock or sciatic-type symptoms.
No reproduction of familiar symptoms.
Stop if symptoms increase sharply, neurological symptoms worsen, pain is not tolerated or symptoms are slow to settle.
Do not interpret stretch alone as positive. Record symptom quality and familiarity.
A positive Piriformis Test may increase suspicion of deep gluteal involvement when it reproduces familiar buttock or posterior thigh symptoms and aligns with sitting intolerance, local tenderness, lumbar screening and related tests.
A negative test may reduce suspicion when the rest of the assessment is also not suggestive. However, it does not exclude deep gluteal syndrome or piriformis-related involvement.
Interpretation is stronger when combined with lumbar screen, Slump, Straight Leg Raise, hip ROM, palpation, seated piriformis test, active piriformis test and symptom behaviour.
High-quality 2020+ diagnostic accuracy evidence for a single Piriformis Test variation appears limited. Recent deep gluteal syndrome literature emphasises a combined diagnostic pathway that includes history, symptom behaviour, physical examination and imaging where appropriate, rather than relying on one test.
Because 2020+ sensitivity, specificity and likelihood ratio values for this exact test variation were not identified, no diagnostic accuracy values are listed here.
Reliability depends on the exact test variation, hip position, force direction, symptom criteria and examiner control. Because several different tests are sometimes grouped under “piriformis testing”, documentation of the exact method is essential.
Common errors include treating muscle stretch as a positive test, ignoring lumbar contributors, not recording symptom quality, using unclear test variations, forcing the hip position and interpreting the test as diagnostic.
Limitations include symptom overlap with lumbar radicular pain, hamstring symptoms, hip joint pain, proximal tendon pain and other deep gluteal structures.
Use the Piriformis Test to document symptom behaviour and guide broader assessment of posterior hip, lumbar and neural contributors.
Record test name, variation used, side tested, result, pain score, symptom location, symptom quality, movement or force direction, hip position, comparison side, symptom familiarity, irritability, confidence in result, compensations and reason for stopping.
Add related findings such as lumbar screen, Slump, Straight Leg Raise, hip ROM, palpation, Pace sign, sitting tolerance and functional symptoms.
Slump Test
Straight Leg Raise Test
Hip Quadrant Test
Hip Internal Rotation Test
Hip External Rotation Test
Pace Sign
Lumbar ROM Tests
It assesses whether posterior hip positioning or resisted loading reproduces familiar buttock or sciatic-type symptoms.
No. A positive finding should reproduce familiar symptoms, not just a general stretch.
No. It may support clinical reasoning but does not confirm a condition on its own.
It should be combined with lumbar screening, neural tests, hip ROM, palpation and symptom behaviour.
The Piriformis Test assesses posterior hip symptom response.
A positive result may suggest deep gluteal involvement but is not diagnostic.
Stretch alone should not be treated as positive.
Record the exact variation and symptom behaviour.
Use the result as part of a broader assessment cluster.
Hernando, M. F., Cerezal, L., Pérez-Carro, L., Abascal, F., & Canga, A. (2020). Deep gluteal syndrome: Anatomy, imaging and management. Needs verification.
Kizaki, K., Uchida, S., Shanmugaraj, A., et al. (2020). Deep gluteal syndrome is defined as a non-discogenic sciatic nerve disorder with entrapment in the deep gluteal space: A systematic review. Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy, 28, 3354–3364. Needs verification.
Mohan Iyer, K. (2024). Piriformis syndrome and deep gluteal syndrome: Presentation, diagnostic approach and management. In Piriformis Syndrome and Deep Gluteal Syndrome. Needs verification.