1. Cam morphology and inguinal pathologies: is there a possible connection?
- Author
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Bisciotti, G., Marzo, F., Auci, A., Parra, F., Cassaghi, G., Corsini, A., Petrera, M., Volpi, P., Vuckovic, Z., Panascì, M., Zini, R., Bisciotti, G N, Di Marzo, F, and Panascì, M
- Subjects
GROIN pain ,PAIN ,MEDICAL radiography ,MEDICAL protocols ,LAPAROSCOPIC surgery ,PATIENTS ,ABDOMINAL surgery ,GROIN surgery ,INGUINAL hernia ,KINEMATICS ,LAPAROSCOPY ,SPORTS injuries ,SYNDROMES ,CROSS-sectional method ,BLIND experiment ,FEMORACETABULAR impingement ,SURGICAL meshes ,SURGERY - Abstract
Background: To analyse the prevalences of the cam and pincer morphologies in a cohort of patients with groin pain syndrome caused by inguinal pathologies.Materials and Methods: Forty-four patients (40 men and 4 women) who suffered from groin pain syndrome were enrolled in the study. All the patients were radiographically and clinically evaluated following a standardised protocol established by the First Groin Pain Syndrome Italian Consensus Conference on Terminology, Clinical Evaluation and Imaging Assessment in Groin Pain in Athlete. Subsequently, all of the subjects underwent a laparoscopic repair of the posterior inguinal wall.Results: The study demonstrated an association between the cam morphology and inguinal pathologies in 88.6% of the cases (39 subjects). This relationship may be explained by noting that the cam morphology leads to biomechanical stress at the posterior inguinal wall level.Conclusions: Athletic subjects who present the cam morphology may be considered a population at risk of developing inguinal pathologies.Level Of Evidence: Level IV, Observational cross-sectional study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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