The Scaphoid Shift Test, also called the Watson Test, assesses dynamic scaphoid movement during wrist deviation while the examiner applies pressure to the scaphoid tubercle. A positive finding may include familiar pain, clunking, subluxation sensation or apprehension. Scapholunate ligament lesions are clinically important because they can alter wrist kinematics, but recent imaging research suggests that adjunctive ultrasound during Watson testing may improve objective assessment compared with manual interpretation alone.
A client reports radial wrist pain after a fall, loaded wrist extension or weight-bearing injury. They may describe clicking, clunking, weakness or difficulty loading the wrist during push-ups, handstands, catching or gripping.
The Scaphoid Shift Test can help assess whether dynamic wrist movement reproduces symptoms consistent with scapholunate instability. It should be performed cautiously, especially after trauma or when fracture is possible.
Test name: Scaphoid Shift Test
Also known as: Watson Test
Body region: Wrist, scaphoid, scapholunate interval
Purpose: Assess dynamic scaphoid movement and symptom response
Positive finding: Familiar radial wrist pain, clunk, subluxation sensation, apprehension or abnormal shift compared with the other side
Negative finding: No familiar symptoms or abnormal scaphoid shift
Best used with: Wrist ROM, palpation, trauma history, grip strength, imaging/referral when indicated and scapholunate ligament assessment
Key limitation: It does not confirm scapholunate ligament injury on its own
The Scaphoid Shift Test is a wrist instability test. The examiner applies pressure to the scaphoid tubercle while moving the wrist from ulnar deviation toward radial deviation. The aim is to assess whether the scaphoid shifts abnormally or reproduces familiar symptoms.
A painful clunk or shift may suggest scapholunate instability, but interpretation requires caution.
The test is used when scapholunate ligament injury or dynamic wrist instability is part of the assessment reasoning.
It may be relevant after a fall onto an outstretched hand, wrist hyperextension, loaded wrist injury, radial wrist pain, clicking, clunking or difficulty with weight-bearing tasks.
The test assesses dynamic scaphoid movement and symptom response. It does not directly visualise the scapholunate ligament and does not confirm the grade of injury.
Symptoms may also be influenced by scaphoid fracture, wrist sprain, joint irritation, ganglion, pain sensitivity or normal ligamentous laxity.
This test may be useful for clients with radial wrist pain, suspected scapholunate instability, post-trauma wrist symptoms, clicking or clunking, grip weakness, gymnasts, weightlifters, manual workers and clients who load the wrist in extension.
Use when scapholunate instability is suspected and acute fracture or severe trauma has been considered.
Use caution with acute wrist trauma, suspected scaphoid fracture, severe pain, swelling, recent surgery, marked instability, unexplained deformity or inability to tolerate wrist movement.
Do not force the test through pain.
Treatment table or chair
Pain and symptom scale
Measurz recording workflow
Optional comparison-side notes
Optional referral/imaging notes
Position the client sitting with the forearm supported and wrist free to move.
The forearm is usually pronated or slightly pronated with the wrist relaxed.
Sit or stand facing the wrist.
Place the thumb over the scaphoid tubercle on the volar-radial wrist. Support the hand with the other fingers.
Control the forearm and wrist without excessive pressure.
Apply dorsal pressure to the scaphoid tubercle while moving the wrist from ulnar deviation and slight extension toward radial deviation and flexion, depending on the protocol.
Ask the client to report pain, clunking, clicking, apprehension, instability sensation and whether symptoms are familiar.
A positive finding is familiar radial wrist pain, painful clunk, subluxation sensation, apprehension or abnormal shift compared with the other side.
A negative finding is no familiar symptoms or abnormal scaphoid shift.
Stop if pain increases sharply, the client feels instability, guarding occurs or the wrist is not tolerated.
Consider fracture or acute ligament injury after trauma. Refer when red flags, swelling or persistent post-trauma pain are present.
A positive Scaphoid Shift Test may increase suspicion of scapholunate instability when it reproduces familiar pain, clunking or apprehension and there is a relevant trauma or loading history.
A positive test does not confirm scapholunate ligament injury. Some people may have ligamentous laxity or non-specific clicking, while pain may arise from other radial wrist structures.
A negative test does not exclude scapholunate injury, especially if symptoms are load-specific, intermittent or occur only during high-demand tasks.
Classic manual diagnostic accuracy estimates for the Scaphoid Shift Test are mostly older than the requested evidence window, and current stand-alone manual accuracy values appear limited.
Condition or presentation: suspected scapholunate ligament injury or dynamic scapholunate instability
Population: people with radial wrist pain or suspected scapholunate lesion
Test variation: manual Watson/Scaphoid Shift Test
Reference standard: variable; imaging, arthroscopy or surgical confirmation in different studies
Sensitivity: not clearly established in current 2020+ manual-test evidence
Specificity: not clearly established in current 2020+ manual-test evidence
Positive likelihood ratio: older values exist but are not listed here due to the 2020+ preference
Negative likelihood ratio: older values exist but are not listed here due to the 2020+ preference
Key limitations: examiner technique, variable pain criteria, normal laxity, imaging differences and limited current manual-test diagnostic accuracy evidence
A 2024 study assessed sonography during the Watson Test in people with scapholunate ligament lesions confirmed by MRI and intraoperative findings, highlighting interest in more objective dynamic assessment during the test.
Reliability depends on thumb placement, pressure direction, wrist movement path, symptom criteria, comparison side and examiner experience.
Manual validity is limited by subjective interpretation of clunking, pain and shift. Dynamic imaging may support assessment where clinically available, but it does not replace careful clinical reasoning.
Common errors include forcing the wrist, ignoring trauma history, treating painless clicking as positive, not comparing sides, using excessive thumb pressure and failing to consider scaphoid fracture.
Limitations include pain guarding, normal laxity, examiner dependency, intermittent instability and limited current stand-alone diagnostic accuracy evidence.
Use the Scaphoid Shift Test to document dynamic wrist symptoms and decide whether further wrist assessment, imaging or referral is appropriate.
Record test name, side tested, result, pain score, symptom location, clunk/click present, apprehension, instability sensation, wrist movement direction, pressure location, comparison side, trauma history, confidence in result and reason for stopping.
Add related wrist ROM, grip strength, radial wrist palpation, scaphoid tenderness, weight-bearing tolerance and referral/imaging notes.
Scapholunate Ligament Assessment
Wrist Extension Test
Wrist Radial Deviation Test
Wrist Ulnar Deviation Test
Grip Strength Test
Finkelstein Test
Allen Test
Upper Limb Tension Tests
It assesses dynamic scaphoid movement and symptom response during wrist deviation.
A positive result may include familiar radial wrist pain, painful clunking, apprehension or abnormal shift compared with the other side.
No. It may support suspicion but does not confirm injury on its own.
Not necessarily. Painless clicking should be recorded but interpreted cautiously.
Record side, pain, clunk, apprehension, pressure location, movement direction, comparison side and trauma history.
The Scaphoid Shift Test assesses dynamic wrist instability symptoms.
A familiar painful clunk is more meaningful than painless clicking.
It does not confirm scapholunate ligament injury on its own.
Use caution after acute trauma or suspected scaphoid fracture.
Measurz should capture symptoms, movement direction, clunk, comparison side and referral reasoning.
Mares, O., & colleagues. (2024). Catch the shift: Ultrasound diagnosis of scapholunate lesion during Watson test. Journal of Hand Surgery Global Online.