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Pivot Concepts:
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UNIPROT:P50502 (
Hip
)
7,003
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Transient synovitis is the most common cause of acute hip pain in children three to 10 years of age. Children with this condition typically present with hip pain for one to three days, accompanied by limping or the refusal to bear weight. Transient synovitis has an uncertain etiology and remains a diagnosis of exclusion. First, septic arthritis must be ruled out, since femoral head destruction, degenerative arthritis and permanent deformity can occur if septic arthritis is not treated promptly. Septic arthritis should be suspected in a patient with severe pain or
spasm
on hip movement or palpation, a temperature higher than 37.5 degrees C (99.5 degrees F) and an erythrocyte sedimentation rate of 20 mm per hour or greater.
Hip
aspiration is the diagnostic procedure of choice if septic arthritis is suspected. Treatment of transient synovitis consists of bed rest and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, with regular temperature checks to exclude the onset of fever. If significant pain and limping persist seven to 10 days after the initial presentation, the patient should be reevaluated.
...
PMID:Transient synovitis of the hip in children. 885 81
The Walkabout orthosis is a relatively new device for assisted standing and mobility in spinal paralysed individuals. The design, with a medially-mounted single-axis hinge joint linking two knee-ankle-foot orthoses, is quite different to other currently available orthoses which have laterally positioned hip joints such as the Reciprocal Gait Orthosis or
Hip
Guidance Orthosis. Twenty-five spinal cord injured patients were fitted and trained with the Walkabout orthosis and followed up regularly for just under 2 years on average. Sixty percent of all the patients fitted have incorporated use of the Walkabout orthosis into their lifestyles. Maintenance of joint mobility and psychological benefits were the most important outcomes of Walkabout usage. Loss of thoraco-lumbar mobility was found to be a limiting factor in successful use of the Walkabout orthosis in patients without active hip flexion. Patient selection criteria should include demonstrated spinal stability without significant deformity, controlled
muscle spasm
, less than 5 degrees of hip or knee flexion contracture, achievable neutral ankle position, mobility of the thoraco-lumbar spine into lateral flexion, good upper limb strength, and motivation with realistic expectations.
...
PMID:Clinical evaluation of a new orthosis, the 'walkabout', for restoration of functional standing and short distance mobility in spinal paralysed individuals. 930 Sep 61
The aim of non-pharmacological intervention for osteoporosis is to prevent, treat or alleviate the consequences of osteoporosis, the main one of which is fracture. Non-pharmacological interventions consist of a wide spectrum of treatment modalities to decrease pain, correct postural change, improve mobility, enable the patient to follow a normal social life and prevent (further) fracture. An exercise programme can increase bone mass in adolescents and adults, but in the elderly its main emphasis should be on improving muscle strength and balance in order to decrease the risk of falls. Physiotherapy is commonly prescribed to mobilize the patient after a fracture, to decrease
muscle spasm
and pain, and to improve balance and co-ordination. An orthesis or back support may be used to correct kyphosis and decrease pain. Medication for pain is often needed and should cover both acute severe pain following fracture and chronic pain caused by postural change. A hip fracture is the most severe consequence of osteoporosis. The risk of hip fracture can be decreased by pharmacological treatment to increase bone mass and bone strength. However, in the very elderly the occurrence of falling may be more important than the failure of bone strength.
Hip
protectors have recently become available and have been shown to decrease the risk of hip fracture after a fall. These shunt the energy from the trochanter away to the sides. Non-pharmacological approaches to treatment are often neglected in daily practice, the emphasis being instead on treatment with drugs that decrease bone resorption and thereby increase bone strength.
...
PMID:Non-pharmacological interventions. 1103 6
We present a case of abdominal pain due to chronic hip dislocation of 75 years duration.
Hip
dislocations are not uncommon, but long-term, unreduced dislocations are vanishingly rare in the developed world. This 80-year-old female, who emigrated to the United States as an adult, presented to the emergency department for acute abdominal pain. Workup showed no intra-abdominal cause for her pain. History revealed she had suffered a traumatic hip dislocation at 5 years of age that was unable to receive adequate treatment because of limited health care access. After several years, she regained functional ability because of anatomic and compensatory musculoskeletal changes in the pelvis. The adaptations likely caused excessive muscular strain resulting in
muscle spasm
at the location of her abdominal pain. To our knowledge, this is the only reported case of a hip that remained dislocated for 75 years.
...
PMID:The curious case of a 75-year-long dislocated hip causing abdominal pain. 3314 21