“…The medical examination of the neck and upper limbs was meticulous and followed a specific protocol [12]. In summary, the occupational physician performed a physical examination of the neck and upper limbs (shoulders, elbows, wrists, hands, fingers) which included the succeeding steps: [1] inspection, [2] testing for passive and active motion and range, [3] testing for muscle strength, muscle contraction and pain, [4] palpation of joints, muscle tendons, and insertions, [5] bedside neurologic examination, containing sensory exam in hands/fingers assessing different kinds of sensation, including pinprick, light touch (soft brush), and temperature (rolltemp, one roller being cold and the other warm), muscle stretch reflexes (biceps, triceps, brachioradialis, achilles), and [6] The subjects who had been diagnosed with fibromyalgia, traumatically-induced neck pain (whiplash), rheumatic or metabolic disease, neurological disease, had symptoms of joint involvement or tendinitis in the shoulder joint or had a severe mental disorder were excluded from the study.…”