Even though I'm a software engineer, I find anatomy fun. FAI is something that I had in each hip, add in I played goalie in hockey, I had shredded labrums as well. I ignored it initially. 10 years later I had enough arthritis in the joints that I could hardly walk 10min. Mine was CAM lesion and my pain was on the lateral side for each hip. 3 years after the surgery, it still bothers me but its fun to learn about this stuff. Thanks for the video.
Hey Khalid! Love your patient case study series. So, I want to ask about how the last exercise you mentioned, where the patient squats to the level that is tolerable, helps the patient?
Interesting question. However, I would say that, being a joint pathology, the Rx is going to be the same. We treat the pts, not the symptoms. This what I can think of
Thanks for more case study
Even though I'm a software engineer, I find anatomy fun. FAI is something that I had in each hip, add in I played goalie in hockey, I had shredded labrums as well. I ignored it initially. 10 years later I had enough arthritis in the joints that I could hardly walk 10min. Mine was CAM lesion and my pain was on the lateral side for each hip. 3 years after the surgery, it still bothers me but its fun to learn about this stuff. Thanks for the video.
Great video
Veryy helpful!
Hey great video! How long would we give it with rehab before referring for an MRI, are there any symptoms which would justify an immediate referral ?
Hey Khalid! Love your patient case study series. So, I want to ask about how the last exercise you mentioned, where the patient squats to the level that is tolerable, helps the patient?
what would make this not a labral tear
Interesting question. However, I would say that, being a joint pathology, the Rx is going to be the same. We treat the pts, not the symptoms. This what I can think of
i'd say gradual onset and no trauma