Hip Joint Pathology: Clinical Presentation and Correlation Between Magnetic Resonance Arthrography, Ultrasound, and Arthroscopic Findings in 25 Consecutive Cases
Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine2003Vol. 13(3), pp. 152–156
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2003 papers
Abstract
Hip pathology, particularly labral pathology, may be more common than has been previously recognized. In those patients with chronic groin and low back pain, a high index of suspicion should be maintained. Clinical signs of a painful, restricted hip quadrant and a positive FABER test result should suggest magnetic resonance arthrography in the first instance, but a negative magnetic resonance image should not preclude hip arthroscopy if there is high clinical suspicion of hip joint pathology.
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