Another Member With a Labral Tear...
Posted: Fri Sep 28, 2012 11:20 pm
I went to see a nationally (U.S.) renowned arthroscopic hip surgeon for FAI/labral tears yesterday - well I saw his NP (nurse practitioner) because I was trying to get in before the end of the year! And drumroll.....I have a labral tear with possible impingement (they said they can't always tell this for sure until surgery) on my left hip (worst SIJD/PN side) and likely on my right hip as well - though we didn't do an MRI on this hip because they basically address one hip at a time. I also had an injection into the hip which took away my groin pain while the anesthetic is in place. The injection was done under ultrasound and was so easy - nothing like any of the other blocks I've had. No pain today either!
While I am glad to have maybe one more piece of the puzzle, I am thoroughly confused and don't really know where to go from here (granted I have not done as much reasearch on hip issues as I have SIJD/PN). Th NP told me to see how I feel in 2 weeks after the steroid has kicked in and that a labral repair arthroscopically is not necessary that damage to the articular cartilage takes a LONG time so the surgery would only be to help my hip (aka groin pain). I am confused about this because other things I have read led me to believe that if the labral tear is not repaired that it will lead to needing a total hip replacement one day. Of course this NP knew nothing about SIJD or PN and said that surgery will not help with those things. I tried to bring up the study with Dr. Coady and Dr. Coleman, but I dont' have any "proof" of their findings....does anyone have any access to reserach about the findings between PN/SIJD and labral tears? She said that the only thing surgery will help is whatever pain the injection took away, but obviously my PN and SIJD didn't develop overnight. Surely years of biomechanical dysfunction would not be fixed with a hip injection! But then again surgery might not fix it either.
I will follow up with her again in 3 weeks and meet with their PT (who will know nothing of PN I'm sure). I'm hoping in the meantime to do a lot of research and if I think arthroscopic surgery is the way to go then find the research needed to persuade my surgeon to agree to try it. I am not naiive enough to believe that all my pain will be gone after surgery, but at the same time if I dont' fix the mechanical issue with my hip, how will I have the chance at getting any better? I know there are people who are living normally with labral tears and don't even realize it, but I'm not living normally - I have a lot of pain and am very debilitated. My only option left is to try PN decompression which I dont' think is the right thing to do. Granted my groin pain varies in intensity and often the SI/PN pain seems more debilitating, but our brains only let us process so much pain, right? I do not thoroughly understand labral repair yet and I knwo there is a risk of worsening PN symptoms with it. I am also concerned as I have some degree of ligament laxity and central sensitization (so I've been told) so I'm not sure how surgery would affect those things.
I do think a labral tear makes sense as to the cause of my initial symptos which were pelvic floor/pain with intercourse symptom, much more so than PN (and my PN has never been typical - no bowel/bladder issues and my worst pain is really just medial to the ishcial tuberosites coming from the obturator internus). This also makes sense to me why the botox and ESWT were such horrible experiences for me due to the instability in my hip. The NP didn't really seem to think that labral tears cause such great hip instability though so I am confused. Wished I could have seen the surgeon himself!
While I am glad to have maybe one more piece of the puzzle, I am thoroughly confused and don't really know where to go from here (granted I have not done as much reasearch on hip issues as I have SIJD/PN). Th NP told me to see how I feel in 2 weeks after the steroid has kicked in and that a labral repair arthroscopically is not necessary that damage to the articular cartilage takes a LONG time so the surgery would only be to help my hip (aka groin pain). I am confused about this because other things I have read led me to believe that if the labral tear is not repaired that it will lead to needing a total hip replacement one day. Of course this NP knew nothing about SIJD or PN and said that surgery will not help with those things. I tried to bring up the study with Dr. Coady and Dr. Coleman, but I dont' have any "proof" of their findings....does anyone have any access to reserach about the findings between PN/SIJD and labral tears? She said that the only thing surgery will help is whatever pain the injection took away, but obviously my PN and SIJD didn't develop overnight. Surely years of biomechanical dysfunction would not be fixed with a hip injection! But then again surgery might not fix it either.
I will follow up with her again in 3 weeks and meet with their PT (who will know nothing of PN I'm sure). I'm hoping in the meantime to do a lot of research and if I think arthroscopic surgery is the way to go then find the research needed to persuade my surgeon to agree to try it. I am not naiive enough to believe that all my pain will be gone after surgery, but at the same time if I dont' fix the mechanical issue with my hip, how will I have the chance at getting any better? I know there are people who are living normally with labral tears and don't even realize it, but I'm not living normally - I have a lot of pain and am very debilitated. My only option left is to try PN decompression which I dont' think is the right thing to do. Granted my groin pain varies in intensity and often the SI/PN pain seems more debilitating, but our brains only let us process so much pain, right? I do not thoroughly understand labral repair yet and I knwo there is a risk of worsening PN symptoms with it. I am also concerned as I have some degree of ligament laxity and central sensitization (so I've been told) so I'm not sure how surgery would affect those things.
I do think a labral tear makes sense as to the cause of my initial symptos which were pelvic floor/pain with intercourse symptom, much more so than PN (and my PN has never been typical - no bowel/bladder issues and my worst pain is really just medial to the ishcial tuberosites coming from the obturator internus). This also makes sense to me why the botox and ESWT were such horrible experiences for me due to the instability in my hip. The NP didn't really seem to think that labral tears cause such great hip instability though so I am confused. Wished I could have seen the surgeon himself!