If its my patient, I tend to go clinical eval first. If it looks and smells like a radic, treat it as such. You know, the whole avoid unnecessary testing, these patients tend to get better anyway, yada yada yada sort of thing. Plus this tends to be the answer theyre looking for on oral boards
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Ill tend to order MRI next. Especially if there are red flags h/o trauma, cancer, fevers/night sweats, progressive neuro findings, pain out of proportion, etc. Ill EMG if it could change management (like if theyre not improving w/ conservative treatment); or if there arent enough clues from H&P and imaging; or if the patients really claustrophobic, or if they have unsecured metal thingies inside them, or if they are way too big for the MRI machine.
A lot of my EMGs for r/o radic though are from referrals pain docs, surgeons that are looking for a specific level to target. Usually, their patients MRIs show multilevel badness. Or, just as likely, they are completely pristine. I kinda hafta do these studies.
Re: the shoulder abduction relief sign. I didnt think it was pathognomonic for a specific root level. Seen it positive in C6 and C7 radics as well.