Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C1762617 (weakness)
37,932 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case of bilateral groin pain of sudden onset in a 14-yr-old boy is presented. The patient reported sudden onset of pain in both inguinal regions during a 100-m dash. He presented a week later to the clinic where physical examination revealed a shuffling gait, bilateral hip flexion contractures, limited active and passive hip extension, and bilateral weakness of hip flexion and knee extension. Plain radiographs of the pelvis revealed avulsion fragments minimally displaced from both anterior inferior iliac spines (AIIS). Pain relief in the acute phase was achieved by limiting ambulation until weight bearing was painless. The patient was treated conservatively and returned to full speed running in 10 wk. Only one case of bilateral AIIS avulsion fractures has previously been reported. AIIS avulsion fractures that are not widely displaced may be treated conservatively. Following a careful program of rehabilitation, full functional recovery following AIIS avulsion fractures may be achieved in 4-6 wk.
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PMID:Bilateral anterior inferior iliac spine avulsion fractures. 877 48

Groin pain is defined as tendon enthesitis of adductor longus muscle and/or abdominal muscles that may lead to degenerative arthropathy of pubic symphises in an advanced stage. Pubic region is a point where kinematic forces cross. The balance between the adductor and abdominal muscles is of great importance, as well as the elasticity of pubic symphises which enables movement of up to 2 mm and rotation of up to 3 degrees. The weakness of the abdominal muscle wall, known as the sportsman's hernia, is the most common cause of painful groin. Groin pain is the most common in soccer players (6.24% in Croatia). Most authors believe that the main cause of groin pain is the adductor muscle overload. When active, sportsmen start to feel a dull pain in the groin region. The adductor test is of great importance for physical examination; the patient should be lying supine with his hips abducted and flexed at 80 degrees. The test is positive if the patient, while attempting to pull his/her legs against pressing in the opposite direction, feels a sharp pain in the groins. The treatment of groin pain is complex and individual, as its causes may vary from patient to patient. Gradual physical therapy combined with pharmacotherapy should be effective in most cases. The latter includes nonsteroid anti-inflammatory drugs and muscle relaxants. A physical therapy programme usually involves stretching and strengthening of adductor muscles, abdominal wall muscles, iliopsoas muscle, quadriceps, and hamstrings. In case that physical therapy and pharmacotherapy fail, surgery is needed, depending on the cause.
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PMID:[The groin pain syndrome]. 1183 Nov 25

Sportsman's hernia is a term used to describe a weakness or disruption of is a term used to describe the musculotendinous part of the posterior inguinal wall, which causes persistent groin pain in athletes. A video-assisted placement of extraperitoneal synthetic mesh to support the damaged area may heal this injury. Forty-one male athletes at an elite level (mean age 27 +/- 7.1 years) with chronic groin pain, which was resistant to conservative therapy, were referred to surgery by sports clinics or club doctors. The majority of the patients were soccer (58%) or ice hockey players (27%) at a professional level. A 10 x 15 cm polypropylene mesh was placed into the preperitoneal space using a totally extraperitoneal video-assisted technique. The severity of pain, and the time to return to sports, were determined after 1 month and after the mean follow-up of 4 years. On operation, no macroscopic abnormality was found in 24 patients (58%), obvious musculotendinous tear was present in 10 patients, and muscle asymmetry was present in 7 patients. All except 2 patients (95%) returned to their sport activities after 1 month of convalescence. No immediate or long-term complications were associated with the operation. The placement of a retropubic mesh was safe and a mini-invasive method to repair sportsman's hernia and chronic groin pain of athletes.
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PMID:Totally extraperitoneal endoscopic (TEP) treatment of sportsman's hernia. 1547 51

Open tension-free hernioplasty using a prosthetic mesh is a common operation for inguinal hernia repair because of the relative ease of the operation and low recurrence rate. Wound infection is a potential complication of all hernia repairs and deep-seated infection involving an inserted mesh may result in chronic groin sepsis which usually necessitates complete removal of mesh to produce resolution. Removal of mesh would potentially result in a weakness of the repair and subsequent hernia recurrence. We reviewed the outcome of all our patients who had mesh removal for sepsis over an 8-year period, particularly examining for hernia recurrence and chronic groin pain. This was a retrospective review of the database of patients who had mesh repair of inguinal hernias over an 8-year period. There were 2,139 inguinal hernias repaired using prosthetic mesh. All patients who had mesh removal for infection were identified and followed up. Fourteen patients had deep-seated wound infection which required mesh removal for resolution of sepsis. No peri-operative complications occurred during mesh removal. After a median follow-up of 44 months (range 5-91 months), there were two asymptomatic recurrences and none of the patients had chronic groin pain. Hernia recurrence is uncommon following mesh removal for chronic groin sepsis, suggesting that the strength of a mesh repair lies in the fibrous reaction evoked within the transversalis fascia by the prosthetic material rather than in the physical presence of the mesh itself. When there is established deep infection, there should be no unnecessary delay in removing an infected mesh in order to allow resolution of chronic groin sepsis.
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PMID:Fate of the inguinal hernia following removal of infected prosthetic mesh. 1691 43

Chronic inguinal and lower abdominal pain in high-performance athletes is common and often disabling problem. Diagnose and treatment is often difficult due to many anatomic structures in the inguinal and groin region that have the potential to cause pain. We report 52 cases of a chronic groin pain in soccer players due to fascial entrapment of the obturator nerve. All patients presented clinical symptoms and signs of post exercise groin, lower abdominal or medial tight pain and adductor muscles weakness and paresthesia in cutaneous distribution of medial thigh. Except clinical signs in the diagnosis of obturator neuropathy we used diagnostic local anaesthetic block and electromyography. In 52 patients the cause of chronic groin pain was obturator neuropathy and they were treated operatively. Surgical neurolysis provided the definitive cure of pain in 41 players.
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PMID:[Neuropathy of the obturator nerve as a source of pain in soccer players]. 1629 95

Groin pain is a common entity in athletes involved in soccer, ice hockey, Australian Rules football, skiing, running, and hurdling. An increasingly recognized cause of groin pain in these athletes is a sports hernia, an occult hernia caused by weakness or tear of the posterior inguinal wall, without a clinically recognizable hernia, that leads to a condition of chronic groin pain. The patient typically presents with an insidious onset of activity-related, unilateral, deep groin pain that abates with rest. Although the physical examination reveals no detectable inguinal hernia, a tender, dilated superficial inguinal ring and tenderness of the posterior wall of the inguinal canal are found. The role of imaging studies in this condition is unclear; most imaging studies will be normal. Unlike most other types of groin pain, sports hernias rarely improve with nonsurgical measures; thus, open or laparoscopic herniorrhaphy should be considered.
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PMID:Sports hernia: diagnosis and therapeutic approach. 1766 70

Sportsman's hernia is an increasingly recognized cause of chronic groin pain in athletes. Although the definition is controversial, it is a condition of chronic inguinal/pubic exertional pain caused by rectus abdominal wall weakness or injury without a palpable hernia, usually affecting high-performance male athletes. Diagnosis is made after careful history and physical examination. Some radiographic studies such as ultrasound or MRI may be helpful in evaluating these patients and ruling out other pathology, although no radiographic study can rule out sportsman's hernias. Because sports hernias are not true hernias but an injury in the rectus insertion, unilateral or bilateral rectus reattachment is the most appropriate surgical treatment. This reattachment may be done in combination with adductor release in the setting of adductor pain or weakness on physical examination. Other surgical repairs (eg, Lichtenstein, Shouldice, Kugel, laparoscopic) do not stabilize the pelvis and tend not to be as successful. In the motivated patient, after surgical repair and physical rehabilitation, 95% are free of pain and able to return to competitive sports.
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PMID:Sports hernias. 1797 64

Obturator neuropathy is a difficult clinical problem to evaluate. One possible cause of pain is due to fascial entrapment of the nerve. Symptoms include medial thigh or groin pain, weakness with leg adduction, and sensory loss in the medial thigh of the affected side. Radiographic imaging provides limited diagnostic help. MRI may detect atrophy in the adductors of the leg. However, it is unable to detect any abnormality of the nerve or in the fibro-osseus tunnel. The best test for diagnosis is by electromyography (EMG) and can be confirmed by a local nerve block. Pharmacologic management of pain and physical therapy can be helpful in the acute phase of injury. Surgical decompression of the nerve should be considered for lesions documented by EMG or local nerve block, for those with predisposing risk factors (prior surgery, pelvic trauma, or hematoma) and with prolonged or severe lesions.
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PMID:Obturator neuropathy. 1946 9

Athletes and other physically active people often suffer prolonged inguinal pain, which can become a serious debilitating condition and may place an athlete's career at risk. A sportsmen hernia is a controversial cause of this chronic groin pain, as it is difficult to be defined. From an anatomical point of view, the definition and the name of this entity should be reviewed. In the majority of athletic manoeuvres, a tremendous amount of torque or twisting occurs in the mid-portion of the body and the front, or anterior portion, of the pelvis accounts for the majority of the force. The main muscles inserting at or near the pubis are the rectus abdominis muscle, which combines with the transversus abdominis. Across from these muscles, and directly opposing their forces, is the abductor longus. These opposing forces cause a disruption of the muscle/tendon at their insertion site on the pubis, so the problem could be related to the fact that the forces are excessive and imbalanced, and a weak area at the groin could be increased due to the forces produced by the muscles. The forces produced by these muscles may be imbalanced and could produce a disruption of the muscle/tendon at their insertion site on the pubis or/and a weak area may be increased due to the forces produced by the muscles, and just this last possibility could be defined as "sportsmen hernia." In conclusion, this global entity could be considered to be an imbalance of the muscles (abductor and abdominal) at the pubis, that leads to an increase of the weakness of the posterior wall of the groin and produces a tendon enthesitis, once a true origin is not detected, that may lead to a degenerative arthropathy of the pubic symphysis in the advanced stages. Based on this, this entity could be re-named as "syndrome of muscle imbalance of the groin" and the sportsmen hernia could be considered as an entity included in this syndrome. It is recommended that a multidisciplinary approach is given to this entity, since the present literature does not supply the proper diagnostic studies and the correct treatment which should be performed in these patients.
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PMID:Sportsmen hernia: what do we know? 2005 44

Several postpartum neurologic injuries have been described in detail, while obturator nerve injuries are rarely reported. We report a woman who had weakness of the right leg and groin pain after cesarean delivery under general anesthesia. Obturator neuropathy was confirmed by electromyography and no compressive lesion of the nerve was seen on magnetic resonance imaging. The patient was treated conservatively and followed until she recovered fully.
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PMID:Intrapartum obturator neuropathy diagnosed after cesarean delivery. 2030 64


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