Another name for a contusion to the iliac crest?
What is a hip pointer.
The strain most commonly injured from sprinting or kicking with a distinct pop leading to a palpable divot; has a high reoccurrence rate.
What is the hamstring?
Evaluates iliopsoas and rectus femoris tightness.
What is Thomas Test?
The joint that stabilizes the pelvis posteriorly.
What is the sacroiliac joint?
The condition suspected after a positive Valsalva maneuver and/or pain that increases during resisted crunches, coughing, sneezing, or picking up a heavy box.
What is a sports hernia (athletic pubalgia).
Has a higher risk of heterotrophic ossification.
What is a quadriceps contusion?
A strain caused by a tensile load such as reaching for a ball or quickly pushing off in a lateral/forward direction.
What is an adductor strain?
A passive test performed with the patient side-lying on the uninvolved leg.
What is Ober's?
Tears are described by referencing a clock face.
What is hip labrum?
The ITB slides over the greater trochanter and makes a "snapping" sound when moving from hip extension to flexion.
What is a symptom of external snapping hip syndrome?
The most common hip pathology in adolescents.
What is Slipped Capitol Femoral Epiphysis?
The muscle injured with active hip flexion and knee extension.
What is the rectus femoris?
A downward force to the femur with added internal and external rotation performed at various degrees of hip flexion.
What is Hip Scouring?
A pincer lesion occurs on ____ while a cam lesion is located on _____ .
What are the acetabulum and femoral head.
Night pain is reported especially when log rolling onto the involved side.
What is a symptom of a femoral stress fracture?
Injury from unbalanced tension between the upward pull from rectus abdominis and downward, lateral pull from adductors which overtime weakens the inguinal wall.
What is athletic pubalgia or sports hernia?
This type of muscle strain with groin pain usually produces pain with stretching of the hip flexors but also pain with resisted hip flexion.
What is iliopsoas?
This bursa may become inflamed following a continual rocking/rowing motion when seated.
What is ischial?
The muscle linked to hip internal rotation or hip abduction pain along with posterior neurological symptoms.
What is the piriformis?
A pathology with symptoms that may mimic a femoral stress fracture.
What is a torn labrum?
A degenerative process leading to necrosis of the hip.
What is Legg-Calve-Perthes Disease?
A MOI for any muscle strain.
What is a dynamic overload?
Produces pain and catching in the hip that would be associated with an anterior hip labrum tear.
What is the Anterior Impingement or FADIR test?
Implicates an inability of the opposite gluteus medius to maintain a stable pelvis.
What is a positive Trendelenberg Test?
Diagnostic imaging is often needed following an insidious onset of pain, ROM restrictions, and other symptoms produced during the FABER test.
What are symptoms of FAI?