Sports Hernia | Causes, Symptoms, and Treatments | Pelvic Rehabilitation Medicine
To learn more about the doctors and the pelvic health practice please visit our website at:
https://www.pelvicrehabilitation.com/
You can also follow our path to bringing exposure to pelvic health concerns on our social media channels.
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/PelvicRehabilitation/
Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/pelvicrehabilitation/
Twitter - https://twitter.com/PelvicRehab
****
Viewers can download
Very often, we have patients who present with abdominal tenderness which likely is a sports hernia. A sports hernia is a weakness in the soft tissue and muscle area around their pubic symphysis and their lower abdomen. This is important because these muscles are their core muscles, and the core muscles are part of your pelvic floor as well. So if you have a weakness there, you will have a weakness in your pelvic floor and thus causing the pelvic pain. Having a sports hernia can now result into pelvic pain because of their weakness in their abdominal muscles and their core. Then patients may present with pain in their groin, they may present with pain going down their leg, pain in their hip. Pelvic pain does radiate, and it does not just stay in one location, so it can mimic other things like lower back pain.
Patients with sports hernias can attribute this from being very active. Oftentimes, they are athletes or have active lifestyles. We're evaluating their lumbar spine, we're evaluating their hips, we're evaluating their abdomen and checking to see if they could have a potential hernia. When patients have sports hernias, we also have to treat the underlying pelvic floor dysfunction that they may have.
Typically, we do that with pelvic floor physical therapists, possibly some Valium suppositories, maybe a nerve medication for any neurogenic inflammation, if they need, we may do hydrodissection nerve blocks and trigger point injections to their pelvic floor. And at the same time, we're hopefully working with a hernia surgeon to evaluate if there is a need for repair of the sports hernia. When patients present with pelvic pain, we're trying to understand where their pelvic pain is coming from and why they have it. Until we figure out what's causing the issue, the pain won't resolve.
Видео Sports Hernia | Causes, Symptoms, and Treatments | Pelvic Rehabilitation Medicine канала Pelvic Rehabilitation Medicine
https://www.pelvicrehabilitation.com/
You can also follow our path to bringing exposure to pelvic health concerns on our social media channels.
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/PelvicRehabilitation/
Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/pelvicrehabilitation/
Twitter - https://twitter.com/PelvicRehab
****
Viewers can download
Very often, we have patients who present with abdominal tenderness which likely is a sports hernia. A sports hernia is a weakness in the soft tissue and muscle area around their pubic symphysis and their lower abdomen. This is important because these muscles are their core muscles, and the core muscles are part of your pelvic floor as well. So if you have a weakness there, you will have a weakness in your pelvic floor and thus causing the pelvic pain. Having a sports hernia can now result into pelvic pain because of their weakness in their abdominal muscles and their core. Then patients may present with pain in their groin, they may present with pain going down their leg, pain in their hip. Pelvic pain does radiate, and it does not just stay in one location, so it can mimic other things like lower back pain.
Patients with sports hernias can attribute this from being very active. Oftentimes, they are athletes or have active lifestyles. We're evaluating their lumbar spine, we're evaluating their hips, we're evaluating their abdomen and checking to see if they could have a potential hernia. When patients have sports hernias, we also have to treat the underlying pelvic floor dysfunction that they may have.
Typically, we do that with pelvic floor physical therapists, possibly some Valium suppositories, maybe a nerve medication for any neurogenic inflammation, if they need, we may do hydrodissection nerve blocks and trigger point injections to their pelvic floor. And at the same time, we're hopefully working with a hernia surgeon to evaluate if there is a need for repair of the sports hernia. When patients present with pelvic pain, we're trying to understand where their pelvic pain is coming from and why they have it. Until we figure out what's causing the issue, the pain won't resolve.
Видео Sports Hernia | Causes, Symptoms, and Treatments | Pelvic Rehabilitation Medicine канала Pelvic Rehabilitation Medicine
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
8 октября 2018 г. 16:35:19
00:02:22
Другие видео канала
Sports Hernia Vs. Groin Strain (DISCUSSION)Sports Hernia - Andrews Sports Medicine & Orthopaedic CenterHeather Wheeler, MD, FACS - Hernia da Vinci DemonstrationFemoral hernia anatomyInflammatory Bowel Disease Causes, Symptoms and Treatment | San Diego HealthHiatal Hernia TreatmentsHARDEST Part of Becoming a DOCTOR | College, Med School, or ResidencyHiatal (Hiatus) Hernia | Risk Factors, Types, Signs & Symptoms, Diagnosis, TreatmentHow Do I Know If I Have Carpal Tunnel Syndrome?2 Effective Sports Hernia Rehab Exercises (TRY THEM)Sports Hernia Exercises & Stretches - Ask Doctor JoWhat are the most common types of hernias and what are the symptoms? | Mr Jonathan WilsonChronic Pelvic Pain in Females | Pelvic Rehabilitation MedicineHow to Treat Groin Injuries in RunnersInguinal Hernia Symptoms and Surgical Repair, Dr. Hadley WessonWhat Causes a Sports Hernia (And How to Avoid/Rehab It)Athletic Pubalgia - Sports Hernia 1Sports Hernias / Gregory Schroder, MD, FACSSports Hernia Exam (WATCH)Different Type of Hernia Surgery Symptoms and Recovering Part2