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Groin Pain in the Athlete

Groin Pain in the Athlete. GUY VOELLER, MD,FACS Professor of Surgery University of Tennessee Past President, The AHS. GPA. Misunderstood by many surgeons Difficult diagnostic issues Difficult treatment issues Many treatment options No RPCT to show surgery is helpful. GPA.

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Groin Pain in the Athlete

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  1. Groin Pain in the Athlete GUY VOELLER, MD,FACS Professor of Surgery University of Tennessee Past President, The AHS

  2. GPA • Misunderstood by many surgeons • Difficult diagnostic issues • Difficult treatment issues • Many treatment options • No RPCT to show surgery is helpful

  3. GPA • Sports hernia is bad name • Pelvis has 2 joints • The ball and socket hip joint • The pubic bone joint • Right and left pubic symphyses act together as the center for a lot of symmetrical soft tissue structures • Meyers uses athletic pubalgia interchangeably with SH

  4. GPA • Unclear etiology • Possible causes of groin pain are vast • Dull, diffuse pain • In groin, pubic, adductor area • Can radiate to inner thigh, perineum or across the midline • Can be acute but 90% give insidious onset • Athletes must stop their activity due to the pain

  5. GPA • Cabot in 1966 • 42,000 Spanish soccer players • Found 202 cases of groin pain (0.5%) • Over a 30 year period

  6. GILMORE’S GROIN • Described dilated superficial inguinal ring • Rarely was a hernia present • Described other pathology • Torn EOA, conjoined tendon, muscle torn from pubic bone • Mainly in soccer players • Common term in Europe and Australia

  7. SPORTS HERNIA • 1992 Malycha and Lovell • Coined the term sports hernia • Sportsman’s hernia was a bulge in posterior inguinal floor • Some felt there was a tear in the TF • Many feel is primary pathology in true SH • Many definitions now and much confusion • Term “SPORTS HERNIA” should only be used for this entity

  8. Malycha and Lovell • 50 athletes with groin pain; prospective; 1992 • Examined adductors, hips, low back, spine, groin, pubic bone • Plain xrays and herniography • Local tenderness above inguinal ligament, lateral and superior to pubic tubercle • Had stopped or curtailed sport and failed conservative therapy • Repaired posterior inguinal wall in 2 layers

  9. Malycha and Lovell (cont.) • Light activity at 3-4 weeks • Return to sport at 6-8 weeks • Questionnaire at 6 months • Asked to complete pain scale and success • All males, duration of symptoms 9 months • 40 patients with significant bulge in posterior wall • 7 patients had no abnormality, 2 indirect hernias and one scar of nerve from repair as youth • 44 filled out questionnaire

  10. Malycha and Lovell • 41 patients returned to normal activity • 33 said result was “good” and 10 “improved • No one was made worse and one not helped • Last sentence of paper is key Athletes who are unable to compete in active sport due to chronic groin pain should be considered for routine inguinal hernia repair if no other pathology is evident after clinical examination and radiologic evaluation

  11. DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS • Must rule out intraabdominal pathology • Urologic problems • Hip joint is common cause of groin pain • Can see with spinal pathology • Muscle strains, nerve entrapment • Osteitis pubis, stress fractures • Ligament problems

  12. MRI • Entire spectrum of related pathology • Results from musculotendinous injuries • Leads to instability of the pubic symphysis • Causal mechanisms of AP poorly understood • Imaging studies in past not helpful • MRI now seen as the study of choice • Must know what to order however

  13. MRI • Empty the bladder • Survey imaging of entire pelvis • Do small field of view, high resolution studies based on survey • Do both non-fat suppressed and fat suppressed fluid sensitive T1 weighted images • Do axial obliques, sagittal and coronal

  14. LIGAMENT and MUSCLE STRAIN • Most common is adductor muscle or tendon • Pain in the upper thigh • Tender along the adductor • No loss of strength • MRI is diagnostic • Avoid lateral movements and PT • Akermark described tenotomy and adductor release • Good if injury is isolated to adductor

  15. Akermark • First to describe tenotomy of adductor longus for chronic groin pain in athletes • 16 patients, all competitive athletes ; had to stop athletic activity ; mean duration of pain 18 months • Pain at adductor refractory to conservative therapy • Soccer, hockey and runners • Tenotomy one cm. from muscle origin at pubic bone • At 35 month mean f/u all but one returned to sport within a mean of 6 weeks

  16. Meyers – AOS 2008 • Describes patients with groin pain and adductor strain; pain with hip adduction against resistance • Treatment of groin, adductors or both combined • Attaches rectus abd. to pubis; similar but not identical to the NA Bassini repair • Adductor longus tendon tenotomy • He calls it athletic pubalgia; problem is pubic joint • 8490 patients; 5460 operations • Uncontrolled series with 95% success

  17. ACETABULAR LABRAL TEARS • 22% of athletes with groin pain have labral tear • The lip of tissue that surrounds acetabulum • Thought to add stability to hip jt. • Explosive lateral moves like in soccer or hockey known to damage labrum suddenly • Can be insidious over months to years thought due to repetitive microtrauma • MRI arthrography is 91% accurate in dx.

  18. OSTEITIS PUBIS • Tender over symphysis • MRI to diagnose • Steroid and local injection • Physical rehab • May take 6-9 months to resolve without injection

  19. NERVE ENTRAPMENT • Irshad • 30 NHL players • found tears in external oblique with nerves coming through the tears • Smedberg found same thing in 7 players • Pain relief with ilioinguinal nerve block • Operate and cut the nerve • Irshad reinforced the EOA

  20. RANDOMIZED TRIAL • Only one RPCT • 66 soccer players with failed conservative tx. • Four groups • One had repair and neurolysis • Others had conserv tx like PT and meds • None lost to f/u • Only surgical grp. had SS improvement and resumed soccer play by 6 weeks • Pathology at surgery not defined however

  21. SURGERY? CHRONIC PAIN REFRACTORY TO LOCAL INJECTION, NSAIDs, PHYSICAL THERAPY AND/OR REST

  22. OPEN REPAIRS • “Bassini” • “Modified Shouldice” • TF to IL • Lichtenstein • Meyer’s repair • Irshad’s technique • Muschaweck • All report 90-95% return to full activity quickly

  23. LAPAROSCOPIC REPAIRS • TAPP and TEP • 5-10 reports with 30-130 patients • Describe tear in posterior wall, a weakness or bulge, true hernia or lipoma • All used mesh • 95-100% return to full activity quickly

  24. AP • Both conservative and various operations applied • Herniorraphy, adductor release, pelvic floor reconstruction, reinforcement of inguinal floor etc • Variable success with all

  25. SUMMARY • Diagnosis of SH must exclude many other pathologies • Patient population is most likely heterogeneous • Once true SH diagnosed there are many surgical options • Many of the open repair techniques are not well described in the papers • Many things described at surgery but not many pictures • Majority of repairs seem to work

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