The Elbow Extension Sign assesses whether a client can fully extend the elbow after acute trauma. Inability to fully extend may increase suspicion of fracture, effusion or significant injury and should prompt appropriate medical assessment. A large multicentre BMJ study reported overall sensitivity of 96.8% and specificity of 48.5% for detecting elbow fracture, with low negative likelihood ratios, while a 2022 systematic review found clinical elbow tests may be useful when negative but are limited by heterogeneity.
A client falls onto an outstretched hand or directly onto the elbow. They have pain, swelling and reduced movement. Before progressing to strength, mobility or sport-specific testing, the first question is whether fracture or significant injury may be present.
The Elbow Extension Sign is a simple screening test: can the client actively straighten the injured elbow to match the uninjured side? A negative result may decrease suspicion of fracture in lower-risk presentations, but it should not be used to ignore concerning trauma history, swelling, deformity, point tenderness or persistent pain.
Test name: Elbow Extension Sign
Also known as: Elbow Extension Test
Body region: Elbow
Purpose: Screen for possible fracture or significant injury after elbow trauma
Positive finding: Inability to fully extend the injured elbow compared with the other side
Negative finding: Full elbow extension achieved compared with the other side
Best used with: Trauma history, swelling, bruising, point tenderness, neurovascular screen and imaging referral when indicated
Key limitation: Full extension does not fully exclude fracture in every case
The Elbow Extension Sign is a clinical screening test used after acute elbow injury. The client attempts to fully extend both elbows, and the injured side is compared with the uninjured side.
It is not a strength test. It is a trauma screening tool that can help decide whether further medical assessment or imaging may be needed.
The test is used to help identify clients who may require radiography or further medical assessment after elbow trauma.
It may be relevant after falls, sport contact, direct blows, hyperextension injuries or any mechanism associated with acute elbow pain and movement loss.
The test assesses active elbow extension after trauma. Loss of extension may reflect fracture, joint effusion, swelling, pain, guarding, dislocation history, soft tissue injury or other significant injury.
It does not identify the exact structure involved.
This test may be useful for adults and children after acute elbow trauma, particularly when assessing whether urgent imaging or referral may be needed.
Use when the client has had an acute elbow injury and it is safe to ask them to gently attempt active extension.
Use caution or defer testing with obvious deformity, suspected dislocation, suspected fracture, open injury, severe pain, marked swelling, neurovascular symptoms, inability to use the limb or any presentation requiring urgent medical review.
Do not force elbow extension.
Pain scale
Measurz recording workflow
Optional referral notes
Optional neurovascular screen notes
Position the client sitting or standing with both arms visible.
Ask the client to flex both shoulders to approximately 90 degrees with the forearms supinated, if tolerated.
Stand in front of the client where both elbows can be observed.
Manual contact is usually not needed unless the arm requires gentle support.
Do not push, pull or force the elbow.
Ask the client to actively extend both elbows fully and compare the injured side with the uninjured side.
Ask the client to stop if pain increases sharply and to report pain location.
A positive Elbow Extension Sign is inability to fully extend the injured elbow compared with the other side.
A negative test is full active extension equal to the comparison side.
Stop if pain is severe, movement is not tolerated, deformity is suspected, neurological symptoms appear or vascular symptoms are present.
A positive finding after trauma should prompt consideration of radiography or medical referral. Full extension should not override other red flags.
A positive Elbow Extension Sign may increase suspicion of fracture, effusion or significant elbow injury after trauma. It does not confirm fracture, but it should raise the threshold for referral or imaging, especially when swelling, point tenderness, bruising, deformity or significant mechanism is present.
A negative Elbow Extension Sign may decrease suspicion of fracture, particularly in lower-risk presentations with improving symptoms and no concerning findings. However, it does not fully exclude fracture. Olecranon fracture, child presentations, persistent pain or worsening symptoms still require appropriate follow-up and referral if indicated.
A multicentre BMJ study of adults and children with acute elbow injury reported overall sensitivity of 96.8% and specificity of 48.5% for detecting elbow fracture. The adult negative likelihood ratio was reported as 0.03, and the child negative likelihood ratio was 0.11. Full elbow extension had a negative predictive value of 98.4% in adults and 95.8% in children.
Condition or presentation: acute elbow injury with possible fracture
Population: adults and children presenting to emergency departments within 72 hours of injury
Test variation: active full elbow extension compared with the other side
Reference standard: radiography, formal radiology report, orthopaedic follow-up or structured follow-up where radiography was not performed
Sensitivity: 96.8% overall
Specificity: 48.5% overall
Positive likelihood ratio: 1.88 overall
Negative likelihood ratio: 0.03 in adults and 0.11 in children
Key limitations: emergency department population, trauma context, imperfect follow-up reference standard for some participants, and caution needed for suspected olecranon fractures
A 2022 systematic review found that elbow full range of motion, elbow extension and elbow extension with point tenderness tests may be useful when negative for helping exclude fracture, but the authors noted heterogeneity across studies and inability to pool some findings.
Higher sensitivity and low negative likelihood ratios make full extension more useful for decreasing suspicion of fracture than inability to extend is for confirming fracture. A positive test should guide further assessment rather than be treated as proof of fracture.
The test is simple and likely more repeatable when performed consistently: both arms visible, active movement only, comparison side observed and no forced movement.
Validity is strongest in acute trauma settings similar to the studied emergency department populations. It should not be automatically applied to non-traumatic elbow pain.
Common errors include forcing extension, failing to compare sides, using the test outside a trauma context without clinical reasoning, interpreting full extension as complete clearance, ignoring swelling or point tenderness and failing to arrange follow-up when symptoms persist.
Limitations include pain guarding, swelling, previous extension loss, child cooperation, hypermobility differences and inability to identify the exact injury.
Use the Elbow Extension Sign as part of acute elbow trauma screening. It may help decide whether the client requires referral, imaging, modified assessment or follow-up review.
Record the test name, side tested, result as positive, negative, unclear or unable to test, pain score, symptom location, trauma mechanism, extension achieved or not achieved, comparison side, swelling, bruising, point tenderness, neurovascular symptoms, confidence in result, reason for stopping and referral or follow-up notes.
Recording these details improves repeatability, communication, client education, assessment reasoning, monitoring over time, team consistency and reporting quality.
Elbow Flexion Test
Elbow Extension Test
Elbow Valgus Stress Test
Elbow Varus Stress Test
Tinel’s Test
Grip Strength Test
Wrist ROM Tests
Upper Limb Neurovascular Screen
It assesses whether a client can fully extend the injured elbow after trauma.
A positive result is inability to fully extend the injured elbow compared with the other side.
No. It may increase suspicion and support referral or imaging, but it does not confirm fracture on its own.
No. Full extension may reduce suspicion, but it does not fully exclude fracture, especially when pain, swelling, point tenderness or concerning mechanism remains.
Its value is mainly in the low negative likelihood ratio reported in acute trauma populations.
Record trauma mechanism, extension ability, pain, swelling, point tenderness, neurovascular findings and referral reasoning.
The Elbow Extension Sign is a trauma screening test.
Inability to extend after injury may increase suspicion of significant injury.
Full extension can decrease suspicion but does not fully exclude fracture.
Do not force elbow extension.
Measurz should capture trauma context, pain, swelling, comparison side and referral notes.
Appelboam, A., Reuben, A. D., Benger, J. R., Beech, F., Dutson, J., Haig, S., Higginson, I., Klein, J. A., Le Roux, S., Saranga, S. S., Taylor, R., Vickery, J., Powell, R. J., & Lloyd, G. (2008). Elbow extension test to rule out elbow fracture: Multicentre, prospective validation and observational study of diagnostic accuracy in adults and children. BMJ, 337, a2428. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.a2428
Marinelli, A., Guerra, E., Rossi, S., Rotini, R., & Zaidenberg, C. R. (2022). Diagnostic accuracy of clinical tests to rule out elbow fracture: A systematic review. Clinics in Shoulder and Elbow. PMID: 35971600.