| Literature DB >> 28327166 |
Joel Glenn Buikstra1, Camdon Fary2, Phong Tran2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients with groin, hip and pelvic pain but normal findings on MRI and minimal changes on x-ray can be a diagnostic problem. This paper looks at the arthroscopic findings of patients who have had hip pain and a positive response to an intra-articular anaesthetic but have non-contributory imaging. We hypothesized that standard MRI's were missing significant pathology and if there was a response to intra-articular local anaesthesia, pathology found during arthroscopy was likely.Entities:
Keywords: Hip arthroscopy; Image-guided injection; Intra-articular hip pathology; Magnetic resonance imaging
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28327166 PMCID: PMC5361835 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-017-1485-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Patient demographics
| Number of patients | 51 (53 hips) |
|---|---|
| Mean age (range) | 32.5 (15–67) |
| Female: male | 40:11 |
| Left: right | 23:30 |
| Main regular sport | |
| Running | 10 |
| Football | 3 |
| ‘Gym’‘gymnastics’ | 5 |
| Netball | 3 |
| Soccer | 2 |
| Cycling | 1 |
| Hockey | 1 |
| Ice skating | 1 |
| Rowing | 1 |
| Basketball | 1 |
| Volleyball | 1 |
| Dancing | 1 |
| None/not specified | 21 |
Precipitating event of pain
| Precipitating event | Number of cases |
|---|---|
| Sport/physical activity | 17 |
| Gradual onset (no precipitating event) | 16 |
| Unclear from clinical notes | 8 |
| Fall/slipped over | 7 |
| Childbirth | 3 |
Confirmed pathology
| Pathology | No. of cases |
|---|---|
| No pathology | 1 |
| LT tear (partial or complete) | 47 |
| Labral tear | 20 |
| Femoral head chondral damagea | |
| Grade I | 4 |
| Grade II | 15 |
| Grade III | 3 |
| Grade IV | 1 |
| Acetabular chondral damagea | |
| Grade I | 13 |
| Grade II | 8 |
| Grade III | 2 |
| Grade IV | 0 |
LT ligamentum teres
aI to IV, Outerbridge classification
Fig. 1Combinations of Intra-Articular Pathology Defined at Time of Arthroscopy for Individual Patients. The most frequent pathology combination was a ligamentum teres (LT) tear with associated chondral damage, which was seen as a combination in 21 hips (40%). A combination of all 3 pathologies (LT tear, labral tear and chondral damage) co-existed in 12 hips (23%; also see Table 3 and Additional file 2)
Fig. 2Total Proportions of Intra-Articular Pathology Identified Arthroscopically. The most common pathology arthroscopically diagnosed in patients with normal imaging was a tear of the ligamentum teres (89% of hips), followed by chondral damage (66%). Labral tears were seen in 20 hips (38%)