AI Article Synopsis

  • Groin pain often indicates issues with the hip or pelvis, making it important to distinguish between the two for proper diagnosis and treatment.
  • This study tested a combined exercise (Resisted Adduction with a Sit-Up, or RASUT) on 160 patients to see if it can effectively differentiate between pelvic and hip pathologies, confirmed by MRI or surgery.
  • Results showed that RASUT is a reliable method for identifying pelvic issues like athletic pubalgia, offering high sensitivity and predictive accuracy, making it a useful tool for sports medicine professionals.

Article Abstract

Groin pain is a common symptom in hip and pelvic pathology and differentiating between the two remains a challenge. The purpose of this study was to examine whether a test combining resisted adduction with a sit-up (RASUT) differentiates between pelvic and hip pathology. The RASUT was performed on 160 patients with complaints of hip or groin pain who subsequently had their diagnosis confirmed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or surgery. Patients were categorized as having pelvic pathology (athletic pubalgia or other) or hip pathology (intra-articular or other). Athletic pubalgia was defined as any condition involving the disruption of the pubic aponeurotic plate. Sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive accuracy, negative predictive accuracy and diagnostic odds ratios were computed. Seventy-one patients had pelvic pathology (40 athletic pubalgia), 81 had hip pathology and 8 had both. The RASUT was effective in differentiating pelvic from hip pathology; 50 of 77 patients with a positive RASUT had pelvic pathology versus 29 of 83 patients with a negative test ( < 0.001). RASUT was diagnostic for athletic pubalgia (diagnostic odds ratio 6.08,  < 0.001); 35 of 45 patients with athletic pubalgia had a positive RASUT (78% sensitivity) and 73 of 83 patients with a negative RASUT did not have athletic pubalgia (88% negative predictive accuracy). The RASUT can be used to differentiate pelvic from hip pathology and to identify patients without athletic pubalgia. This is a valuable screening tool in the armamentarium of the sports medicine clinician.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9052402PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jhps/hnab075DOI Listing

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