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101N

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Please stop operating on acetabular labral tears in young people with butt pain. They seldom improve once you are done.

Am J Sports Med. 2012 Dec;40(12):2720-4. doi: 10.1177/0363546512462124. Epub 2012 Oct 25.
Prevalence of abnormal hip findings in asymptomatic participants: a prospective, blinded study.
Register B1, Pennock AT, Ho CP, Strickland CD, Lawand A, Philippon MJ.
Author information

Abstract
BACKGROUND:
The prevalence of abnormal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings in an asymptomatic population has yet to be determined.

PURPOSE:
The purpose of this study was to assess a cohort of asymptomatic people to determine the prevalence of hip lesions.

STUDY DESIGN:
Cross-sectional study; Level of evidence, 3.

METHODS:
Forty-five volunteers with no history of hip pain, symptoms, injury, or surgery were recruited for enrollment in this institutional review board-approved study. The subjects underwent a unilateral MRI scan with a Siemens 3.0-tesla scanner. The extremity side evaluated by MRI was alternated. All MRI scans were reviewed by 3 fellowship-trained musculoskeletal radiologists. The scans were mixed randomly with 19 scans from symptomatic patients to blind the radiologists to the possibility of patient symptoms. An abnormal finding was considered positive when 2 of 3 radiologists agreed on its presence.

RESULTS:
The average age of volunteers was 37.8 years (range, 15-66 y); 60% were men. Labral tears were identified in 69% of hips, chondral defects in 24%, ligamentum teres tears in 2.2%, labral/paralabral cysts in 13%, acetabular bone edema in 11%, fibrocystic changes of the head/neck junction in 22%, rim fractures in 11%, subchondral cysts in 16%, and osseous bumps in 20%. Participants older than 35 years were 13.7 times (95% CI, 2.4-80 times) more likely to have a chondral defect and 16.7 times (95% CI, 1.8-158 times) more likely to have a subchondral cyst compared with participants 35 or younger. No other joint lesions were associated with age. Male subjects were 8.5 times (95% CI, 1.2-56 times) more likely to have an osseous bump than female subjects. No other joint lesions were associated with sex.

CONCLUSION:
Magnetic resonance images of asymptomatic participants revealed abnormalities in 73% of hips, with labral tears being identified in 69% of the joints. A strong correlation was seen between participant age and early markers of cartilage degeneration such as cartilage defects and subchondral cysts.

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i work with an orthopod who does 15 hip arthroscopies in a day. 2 rooms, makes a buttload of cash. groin pain? yes. butt pain? no
 
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101N - Good luck.

Don't we have nearly identical research about the prevalence of lumbar findings in asymptomatic indiviuals? Spinal fusion isn't slowing down around here.
 
Nor are spinal injections for axial back pain.
 
i work with an orthopod who does 15 hip arthroscopies in a day. 2 rooms, makes a buttload of cash. groin pain? yes. butt pain? no

That is very unfortunate for those patients. This money driven. Hip scopes pay much more than shoulder/knee scopes.

A few studies have suggested hip scopes significantly accelerate hip DJD, and basically you should only do a hip scope for severe pain and large tear.

another case where surgeons chasing money, end up maiming patients.
 
i work with an orthopod who does 15 hip arthroscopies in a day. 2 rooms, makes a buttload of cash. groin pain? yes. butt pain? no

The facility fee alone can be $8K.
 
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