Pediatric hip pain can have orthopedic, infectious, inflammatory, neoplastic, or nonmusculoskeletal etiologies. Organizing the differential diagnosis by symptom chronicity and a determination of intraarticular versus extraarticular pain, as well as the age at pain onset, can be helpful to hone in on the cause. Clinicians should consider plain radiographs in cases of acute trauma, with concern for bony pathology, or in patients with unexplained limp or hip pain, with musculoskeletal ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging used as advanced imaging when indicated. Relative rest with subsequent strengthening and stretching should be prescribed in nonoperative conditions, though several pediatric hip pain diagnoses require orthopedic or other specialty referral for definitive treatment. This article is a comprehensive review of hip pain etiologies in the pediatric population.
Keyphrases
- chronic pain
- pain management
- neuropathic pain
- magnetic resonance imaging
- squamous cell carcinoma
- total hip arthroplasty
- primary care
- computed tomography
- oxidative stress
- spinal cord injury
- palliative care
- high resolution
- mass spectrometry
- liver failure
- smoking cessation
- postoperative pain
- photodynamic therapy
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- respiratory failure