AI Article Synopsis

  • The joints in the lower extremity, from the lumbar spine to the foot, are closely interconnected, meaning pain in one joint can affect adjacent joints above or below it.
  • Understanding how issues in nearby joints impact hip health is essential for advising patients before hip surgeries.
  • Patients with femoroacetabular impingement syndrome and knee pain on the same side may have less favorable outcomes after hip surgery, but they can still expect significant symptom relief in both the hip and knee post-operation.

Article Abstract

From the lumbar spine to foot, the joints of the lower extremity are all intimately connected. Their movements are synchronized in a complex biomechanical dance. Pain in one joint tends to affect the joint above and joint below. Understanding the influence of adjacent-joint disease on the hip can help us better counsel patients undergoing hip surgery. Low-back pathology has been shown to negatively influence outcomes after hip arthroscopy. Ipsilateral knee pain appears to do the same. Patients with femoroacetabular impingement syndrome with ipsilateral knee pain should be counseled that their outcomes may not be quite as good as those without knee pain, but they should be able to expect meaningful improvement of their symptoms, both at the hip and at the knee after hip arthroscopy.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.arthro.2023.12.004DOI Listing

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