Plantar Fasciitis Provocation Test provokes pain with which maneuver?

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Multiple Choice

Plantar Fasciitis Provocation Test provokes pain with which maneuver?

Explanation:
Plantar fasciitis is diagnosed by stressing the plantar fascia where it attaches to the heel. When you perform resisted plantarflexion, the foot pushes down against resistance and the arch is loaded, pulling on the plantar fascia. In someone with plantar fasciitis, this tension at the plantar fascia origin provokes the characteristic heel pain, making this maneuver a sensitive way to provoke symptoms and identify this condition. For context, other provocative maneuvers test the fascia in different ways (for example, passive dorsiflexion of the big toe with weight-bearing stretches the fascia via the windlass mechanism), while palpation simply localizes tenderness.

Plantar fasciitis is diagnosed by stressing the plantar fascia where it attaches to the heel. When you perform resisted plantarflexion, the foot pushes down against resistance and the arch is loaded, pulling on the plantar fascia. In someone with plantar fasciitis, this tension at the plantar fascia origin provokes the characteristic heel pain, making this maneuver a sensitive way to provoke symptoms and identify this condition.

For context, other provocative maneuvers test the fascia in different ways (for example, passive dorsiflexion of the big toe with weight-bearing stretches the fascia via the windlass mechanism), while palpation simply localizes tenderness.

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