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What Is a Musculoskeletal Assessment?

  • Apr 25
  • 6 min read

A sore shoulder that will not settle. Back pain that keeps returning. A knee problem that flares up every time you try to run, squat or even get comfortable at your desk. In these situations, one question matters before any treatment starts - what is a musculoskeletal assessment, and how does it actually help?

Put simply, a musculoskeletal assessment is a detailed clinical assessment of your muscles, joints, tendons, ligaments, nerves and movement patterns. It is designed to work out what is causing your pain or restriction, what structures may be involved, how serious it appears to be, and what needs to happen next. It is not just a quick look at the painful area. A good assessment connects your symptoms with how you move, your medical history, your day-to-day demands and your recovery goals.

That matters because pain is not always straightforward. The place that hurts is not always the true source of the problem. A painful shoulder may be linked to neck stiffness, poor scapular control or overload from work and gym training. Knee pain can relate to the hip, foot mechanics, training volume or previous injury. Without a proper assessment, treatment can become guesswork.

What is a musculoskeletal assessment looking for?

The main aim is clarity. Your clinician is trying to identify the likely cause of your symptoms, rule out anything that needs urgent medical attention, and build a treatment plan that fits your body and your life.

In practice, that means looking at several things at once. First, there is the nature of the pain itself. When did it start? Was there an injury, or did it come on gradually? Is it sharp, aching, burning or stiff? Does it spread anywhere? What makes it better or worse? Pain that appears after sport can mean something very different from pain that wakes you at night or comes with pins and needles.

Next comes function. Can you walk normally, lift your arm, turn your neck, get up from a chair, climb stairs, sleep comfortably or return to exercise? For many people, the real problem is not the pain score itself but the way symptoms interfere with work, parenting, training or simple daily tasks.

A musculoskeletal assessment also looks for patterns. Some conditions are clearly linked to overload, weakness or reduced mobility. Others suggest irritation of a tendon, joint, bursa or nerve. Sometimes the findings point towards post-operative stiffness, sports injury, age-related wear and tear, or a flare-up of a longer-term condition. The assessment helps sort through those possibilities.

What happens during a musculoskeletal assessment?

A proper assessment is usually more detailed than people expect, but it should still feel clear and manageable. You should leave understanding what has been found, what may still need monitoring, and what the next step is.

1. Talking through your symptoms

The first part is a conversation. Your physiotherapist will ask about your pain, how long it has been going on, whether there was a specific injury, and how it affects your everyday life. They may ask about work, sport, previous injuries, general health, medication, scans or surgery.

This is not small talk. It gives vital clues. For example, an ankle that rolled during football is assessed differently from an ankle that became swollen without injury. A stiff back after gardening may be mechanical. Back pain with changes in bladder function is a very different matter and needs urgent medical attention.

2. Watching how you move

You may then be asked to walk, bend, reach, squat, balance or perform a movement that normally brings on your symptoms. This helps assess quality of movement, strength, control, confidence and compensation.

Often, the way somebody moves tells you as much as the painful area itself. A person with calf pain may be overloading one side because of hip weakness. Someone with shoulder pain may be shrugging the shoulder to avoid a painful arc. Movement assessment helps build the bigger picture.

3. Hands-on clinical testing

This usually includes checking joint movement, muscle strength, tenderness, swelling, stability and flexibility. Your clinician may feel specific structures, move the joint in different directions and test resisted movements to narrow down which tissues are involved.

If nerve symptoms are present, neurological testing may be included. That can involve reflexes, sensation and muscle power. These tests help distinguish between local tissue irritation and symptoms that may be coming from the spine or nervous system.

4. Clinical reasoning and explanation

The most valuable part of the appointment is often the explanation. A strong assessment should not leave you wondering what was found. You should be given a working diagnosis or at least a clear explanation of the likely source of symptoms, whether anything more serious needs ruling out, and what treatment options make sense.

Sometimes the answer is very straightforward. Sometimes it is more cautious, especially early after injury or when symptoms overlap. Good clinicians are honest about that. Not every case is neat on day one, but there should still be a plan.

Why a musculoskeletal assessment matters before treatment

People often come in wanting the pain fixed as quickly as possible, which is completely understandable. But the fastest route is not always to start treatment immediately without understanding the problem.

Massage, manipulation, shockwave therapy, acupuncture, exercises and injections can all have a place. The question is whether they are the right fit for your condition at that point in time. A tendon that is highly irritated may need load management before strengthening progresses. A stiff joint may respond well to hands-on treatment, but only if underlying weakness and movement habits are addressed too. An injection may reduce pain in the short term, but if mechanics and function are not improved, symptoms can return.

This is where expert assessment makes the difference. It helps avoid generic advice, treatment that sounds impressive but misses the real issue, and recovery plans that do not match your goals.

What conditions can a musculoskeletal assessment help with?

It is used for a wide range of problems, from new injuries to long-standing pain. Common examples include back and neck pain, shoulder pain, sports injuries, tendon problems, joint stiffness, post-operative rehabilitation, sciatica, knee pain, hip pain, ankle injuries and work-related strain.

It is also helpful when the issue is less obvious. Perhaps you are not in severe pain, but your movement feels restricted, your strength has dropped off, or you cannot return to normal exercise without recurring flare-ups. A musculoskeletal assessment is often the best starting point when something simply does not feel right.

What if you have already had a scan?

Scans can be useful, but they do not replace a clinical assessment. MRI, ultrasound and X-ray findings need to be matched with symptoms and function. Plenty of people have scan results that sound worrying but are not the true cause of pain. Others have severe symptoms with fairly modest imaging findings.

That is why assessment still matters. It puts the scan into context and helps answer the question patients actually care about - what does this mean for me, and what can I do about it?

What makes a good musculoskeletal assessment?

A good assessment feels thorough without being overwhelming. It should be tailored, not rushed, and focused on your goals as well as your symptoms. If you want to get back to running, lifting, working comfortably or caring for your children without pain, that should shape the discussion.

It should also be practical. You do not need a lecture in anatomy. You need clear answers in plain English. What is the likely issue? What should you avoid, if anything? What should you keep doing? How long might recovery take? What treatment options are sensible? When should progress be reviewed?

At a specialist clinic such as Atlas Physiotherapy Clinic, the aim is not simply to label the problem. It is to give you a personalised treatment plan and a realistic route forwards, whether that involves hands-on physiotherapy, guided rehabilitation, shockwave therapy, injection therapy, remote support or onward referral when needed.

What is a musculoskeletal assessment not?

It is not a one-size-fits-all screening exercise, and it is not just a pain checklist. It should not end with a sheet of standard exercises handed over with little explanation. It is also not about finding every tiny weakness or imperfection in the body. Many people move asymmetrically or have old scan findings without those things being clinically important.

The real purpose is to identify what is relevant to your symptoms and function now. That focus is what makes treatment more efficient and more personal.

If you have been putting up with pain, hoping it will settle on its own, there is value in getting answers sooner rather than later. A musculoskeletal assessment does not just tell you what hurts. Done properly, it tells you why it may be happening, what can be done about it, and how to move forwards with more confidence.

 
 
 

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