BALTIMORE — Considering tests done on injured body parts belonging to Yankees players have delivered brutal results, the club was encouraged Gleyber Torres and Gio Urshela didn’t have to join the plethora of other Yankees on the injured list Monday.

In fact, Torres was in the lineup as the designated hitter against the dreadful Orioles at Camden Yards and Urshela, who wasn’t, said he was ready to play.

DJ LeMahieu and Torres have been the Yankees’ MVPs throughout the first four months of the season and had Torres gone down for an extended stretch it would have been devastating.

So, when the results of an ultrasound test came back without bad news the Yankees’ spirits were lifted.

“[Sunday night] I felt something different in my body. In that moment I didn’t know what it was exactly,’’ said Torres, who exited that night’s 7-4 win over the free-falling Red Sox at the start of the visitors’ eighth. “I just tried to tell the trainer and I went to the hospital. I got a lot of tests [checking] if I had a hernia or something like that. I took a pill [Sunday night] and I feel so much better right now.’’

Urshela, who fouled pitches off his right knee and left shin in his final at-bat Sunday, left the game at the start of the ninth and had x-rays taken, reported progress.

“It’s better than [Sunday] night,’’ said Urshela, who had the knee wrapped, a bandage on the shin and explained he felt the knee more than the shin. “I never saw that [two foul balls off the legs in the same at-bat] before. It is the first time it happened to me.’’

Aaron Boone said Torres being the DH on Monday night was in the plans and not necessarily a byproduct of what happened Sunday.

For a team that hasn’t had former ace Luis Severino and stud reliever Dellin Betances all year, Giancarlo Stanton limited to nine games, Miguel Andujar to 12 and put Luke Voit, Aaron Hicks and Edwin Encarnacion on the IL inside of four days (July 31-Aug. 4), losing Torres might have been the injury that hurt the most.

Beyond what he has done at the plate where he took a .286 average, 23 homers, 62 RBIs, an .867 OPS and a .398 average with runners in scoring position (second to LeMahieu’s team-leading .418) entering Monday night’s action, Torres filled in for Didi Gregorius at short while he was coming back from Tommy John surgery. Torres, an AL All-Star in each of his first two big-league seasons, has started 64 games at short and 37 at second.

While Boone said he was planning on giving Torres a DH game for a couple of days, the manager likely wanted Torres more for his bat than glove against the morbid Orioles. Torres, who homered twice against the Red Sox in the second game of Saturday’s doubleheader and was tied for the major league lead with five multi-homer run games this season entering Monday night’s action, had four of them against the Birds. In 11 games with an at-bat against the Orioles this season, Torres has at least one hit in each and was hitting .465 with 10 homers and 13 RBIs.

“That he was able to get on the plane with us was definitely nice,’’ said Boone, who started Breyvic Valera at second and LeMahieu at third against Orioles right-hander Gabriel Ynoa. “And obviously seeing him [Monday] morning at brunch and feeling that he is good to go.’’