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The Complete Guide to Muscle Testing for Physical Therapists

Written by PtEverywhere | May 26, 2025 4:00:00 AM

Muscle testing is a foundational skill in physical therapy, providing essential insights into a patient’s neuromuscular status. Through precise manual evaluation techniques, therapists can detect weaknesses, track progress, and make evidence-based decisions about care.

For physical therapy professionals and clinic owners, mastering manual muscle testing (MMT) and applying consistent grading systems like Kendall and Daniels and Worthingham’s is critical. When paired with efficient documentation tools, muscle testing becomes not just clinically valuable - but also time-saving and scalable.

This article breaks down everything you need to know about muscle testing, how to use it effectively, and how software like PtEverywhere can streamline it in your daily workflow.

What is Muscle Testing?

Muscle testing refers to the evaluation of muscle strength through the application of external force. The therapist tests a muscle or muscle group’s ability to resist pressure, typically in standardized positions.

It helps answer questions like:

  • Is this muscle functioning as expected?

  • Has strength improved since the last session?

  • Is there a neurological or orthopedic cause behind weakness?

Manual muscle testing is often used in orthopedic rehab, neurological conditions, post-operative recovery, and strength training programs.

Manual Muscle Testing Grades: Kendall Muscle Grading System

The Kendall Muscle Grading System is one of the most detailed and widely accepted MMT scoring systems used today. It expands upon the traditional 0–5 scale by incorporating plus (+) and minus (–) modifiers, giving therapists more precise measurements.

✅ Kendall Muscle Grading System Table

Grade

Score

Description

Normal

5

Full range of motion against gravity with maximal resistance

Good+

4+

Full range of motion against gravity with moderate-to-strong resistance

Good

4

Full range of motion against gravity with moderate resistance

Good–

4–

Full range of motion against gravity with slight-to-moderate resistance

Fair+

3+

Full range of motion against gravity with slight resistance

Fair

3

Full range of motion against gravity with no resistance

Fair–

3–

Less than full range of motion against gravity, but more than half the range

Poor+

2+

Full range of motion in a gravity-eliminated position with slight resistance

Poor

2

Full range of motion in a gravity-eliminated position with no resistance

Poor–

2–

Less than full range of motion in a gravity-eliminated position

Trace

1

No visible movement, but palpable muscle contraction

Zero

0

No visible or palpable contraction

This system is beneficial in neurological and post-surgical cases, where small improvements in strength can indicate meaningful progress.

Daniels and Worthingham’s Muscle Grading Scale

Another widely respected system is the Daniels and Worthingham Muscle Grading Scale, commonly used alongside or as a simplified version of Kendall. It assigns manual muscle testing scores from 0 to 5 without plus or minus modifiers.

✅ Daniels and Worthingham Muscle Grading Table

Grade

Description

5

Normal: Full ROM against gravity with maximal resistance

4

Good: Full ROM against gravity with moderate resistance

3

Fair: Full ROM against gravity without resistance

2

Poor: Full ROM in a gravity-eliminated position

1

Trace: Muscle contraction visible or palpable, but no movement

0

Zero: No contraction detected

This scale is more straightforward and ideal for quick assessments, education, or multidisciplinary environments.

Applying Manual Muscle Testing in Physical Therapy

To ensure accurate results when performing a muscle test, therapists should:

  1. Use Consistent Positioning: Gravity and limb orientation play a key role. For example:

    • Grades 3 and above require movement against gravity.

    • Grades 2 and below are tested in gravity-eliminated positions.

  2. Apply Appropriate Resistance: Gradually apply force at the distal end of the limb, resisting the muscle’s action without jerking.

  3. Control for Substitution: Watch for compensatory movements that may lead to false positives.

  4. Test Bilaterally When Possible: Compare strength to the unaffected side to determine deficits.

Benefits and Limitations of Manual Muscle Testing

✅ Benefits:

  • Low-cost and accessible

  • Quickly performed

  • Useful for establishing baselines

  • Effective for tracking change over time

❌ Limitations:

  • Subjective: Inter-clinician reliability can vary

  • Not sensitive to small changes in high-grade strength

  • Doesn’t measure endurance, coordination, or power

While manual muscle testing is not exhaustive, it remains a crucial component in physical therapy assessments.

Debunking Myths: Applied Kinesiology vs. Evidence-Based MMT

You may encounter references to applied kinesiology, a non-clinical approach suggesting that muscle responses can diagnose allergies, emotional issues, or organ dysfunction. However, this is not the same as evidence-based manual muscle testing. Applied kinesiology lacks peer-reviewed validation and is not endorsed in clinical PT practice.

Stick to validated scales like Kendall or Daniels when assessing strength for physical therapy goals.

Digitizing Muscle Testing with PtEverywhere

PtEverywhere empowers physical therapists by making manual muscle testing easier to document, track, and report. Here’s how the platform simplifies your workflow:

  • Point-and-Click Grading: Choose grades for each muscle directly within the patient chart

  • Visual Progress Tracking: Graph strength improvements session-by-session

  • Integrated SOAP Notes: Automatically sync MMT scores into clinical documentation

  • Standardized Forms: Reduce inter-clinician variability with embedded grading protocols

  • Accessible References: Access Kendall and Daniels grading tables during live evaluations

With PtEverywhere, your team can perform, record, and utilize muscle test data without switching between paper, spreadsheets, or disconnected systems.

Final Thoughts

Muscle testing is a time-tested and essential skill in physical therapy, especially when implemented using standardized and validated systems like Kendall and Daniels & Worthingham’s. Whether you're conducting post-op strength evaluations or monitoring neuromuscular recovery, proper grading ensures clarity and consistency in your care.

Yet, as practices grow and expectations rise, efficiency matters. That’s where tools like PtEverywhere bring value - enabling therapists to document manual muscle testing grades, review historical progress, and streamline workflows, all while improving patient outcomes.

Ready to modernize your manual muscle testing process? Visit PtEverywhere.com to learn more and request a demo.