Hip flexor tendonitis may cause you to have difficulty with normal walking, running, or stair climbing. Sometimes, the simple act of rising from a chair is difficult with hip tendonitis. If you have hip tendonitis, you may benefit from exercise to help relieve your pain.
The most common symptom of hip flexor tendonitis is pain that gradually develops over time. Hip flexor tendinopathy causes pain and tenderness in the front of your hip. Your hip or groin area may feel sore to the touch. You might also hear or feel a click or snap if the tendon rubs across your hip bone as you walk. Discomfort when contracting the hip muscle. Hip stiffness in the mornings or after being stationary for a long time. Many people can care for it on their own by using RICE therapy (Rest, Ice, Compression, Elevation) and taking over-the-counter pain medication. Physical therapy to help stretch and strengthen the hip area can be helpful in treating hip tendonitis.
Other Names
- Iliopsoas Tendinopathy
- Iliopsoas Bursitis
- Iliopectineal Bursitis
- Medial snapping hip syndrome
- Iliopsoas strain
Pathophysiology
- General
- Due to repetitive hip flexion and external rotation
- Bursitis vs tendinitis
- Note that iliopsoas bursitis and iliopsoas tendinitis are discrete entities
- However, interrelated inflammation of one leads to inflammation of the other
- Clinically, they present the same and thus are indistinguishable
- Biomechanics
- During the stance phase when running, the hip is extending
- The iliopsoas contracts eccentrically, decelerating the hip
- Gains potential energy as it elongates
- Energy is then released during the swing phase as the ipsilateral limb comes forward
Causes
- Acute trauma
- Less common
- Overuse injury
- Likely due to repetitive hip trauma as the result of flexion and extension
- Maybe in part due to sudden hyperextension of a flexed hip, stretching the iliopsoas muscle and bursa
- Another hypothesis is a flexed, abducted, and externally rotated hip causes the muscle and bursa to snap over the femoral head and joint capsule
- An enlarged bursa is more commonly seen in individuals with hip-related symptoms and not overuse injuries
- The tendon may also rub against the pubic iliopectineal eminence
- Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA)
- Although joints are classically involved in RA, tynosynovium, and bursa may be affected
- Associated with RA affecting the Hip Joint, less commonly in isolation of the bursa
- Approximately 14% – 30% of iliopsoas bursa communicate with the hip joint
Pathoanatomy
- Iliopsoas
- Composed of Iliac, Psoas Major, and Psoas Minor
- The function is primarily hip flexion, to a lesser degree external rotation
- Mscle passes anterior to the pelvic brim and hip capsule in a groove between the anterior inferior iliac spine laterally and iliopectineal eminence medially
- Iliopsoas Bursa sits inferior to these muscles and above the joint capsule of the Hip Joint
Associated Pathology
- Rheumatoid Arthritis
- Snapping Hip Syndrome
- Hip Osteoarthritis
- Sports
- Dancing
- Ballet
- Resistance training
- Cycling
- Rowing
- Running (particularly uphill)
- Track and field, especially hurdling
- Soccer
- Gymnastics
- History of Total Hip Replacement
- Rheumatoid Arthritis
Differential Diagnosis
- Fractures And Dislocations
- Pelvic Fracture
- Hip Fracture
- Acetabular Fracture
- Femoral Neck Stress Fracture
- Pelvic Stress Fracture
- Hip Dislocation
- Arthropathies
- Osteitis Pubis
- Avascular Necrosis of the Hip
- Hip Osteoarthritis
- Femoroacetabular Impingement
- Transient Osteoporosis of the Hip
- Muscle and Tendon Injuries
- Hip Flexor Tendonitis
- Piriformis Syndrome
- Hamstring Strain
- Proximal Hamstring Tendinopathy
- Adductor Strain
- Greater Trochanteric Pain Syndrome
- Bursopathies
- Iliopsoas Bursitis
- Ischial Bursitis
- Ligament Injuries
- Acetabular Labrum Tear
- Neuropathies
- Meralgia Paresthetica
- Other
- Snapping Hip Syndrome
- Septic Arthritis
- Gout
- Leg Length Discrepancy
- Pediatric Pathology
- Transient Synovitis of the Hip
- Developmental Dysplasia of the Hip (DDH)
- Legg-Calve-Perthes Disease
- Slipped Capital Femoral Epiphysis (SCFE)
- Avulsion Fractures of the Ilium (Iliac Crest, ASIS, AIIS)
- Ischial Tuberostiy Avulsion Fracture
- Avulsion Fractures of the Trochanters (Greater, Lesser)
- Apophysitis of the Ilium (Iliac Crest, ASIS, AIIS)
Diagnosis
- History
- Pain may be insidious or acute
- Located on the anterior hip but sometimes less focal or at deep to the groin
- Often worse during exercise and immediately following
- Initially, pain-free at rest may develop pain even at rest
- May or may not have a snapping sensation, which is more common in the athletic population
- Often worse with sitting for a long period of time, walking upstairs, jogging, running and kicking
- The pain may radiate down the thigh towards the knee
- Physical Exam
- An inguinal mass suggests an enlarged bursa, usually in more chronic presentations
- Tenderness to palpation distal to the inguinal ligament, lateral to the femoral triangle, medial to Sartorius is considered pathognomonic
- There may be weak resisted external rotation
- Pain with resisted hip flexion
- Pain with exaggerated passive hip extension
- Special Tests
- Thomas Test: Ipsilateral limb is flexed to chest, the contralateral limb is brought into extension
- Modified Thomas Test: Same as Thomas test, except contralateral limb allowed to hang off the table
- Snapping Hip Sign: extension of their flexed, abducted, and externally rotated hip (needs to be updated)
- Pelvifemoral Angle: measure angle of pelvis to hip flexor
- Elys Test: prone, passively flex the knee to buttocks
- Rectus Femoris Contracture Test: knee to chest, observe the contralateral limb
- Prone Hip Extension Test: prone, extend affected hip, measure horizontal thigh angle
Radiographs
- Standard Hip Radiographs
- The screening tool, typically normal
- Can consider arthrography, biography although these have fallen out of favor for MRI
Ultrasound
- May demonstrate
- Well defined, thin-walled fluid collection along the iliopsoas tendon[7]
- Can be used to guide a needle for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes
- Target is just inferior to the iliopsoas muscle-tendon junction
MRI
- Findings
- Distended bursa
- Peritendinous fluid
- Can demonstrate communication between bursa and hip joint
Treatment
Nonoperative
- Relative rest
- Physical Therapy
- Emphasis on eccentric exercises
- Stretching involving hip extension for 6-8 weeks in alleviating symptoms[8]
- Pharmacotherapy
- NSAIDS
- Corticosteroid Injection
Operative
- Indications
- Technique
- Tenotomy
- Tendon lengthening