Hip pain is different in female dancers: New Insights from dynamic ultrasound

Dancers put unique demands on their hips, achieving extreme ranges of motion that can strain the joints and damage supporting tissues around them. Not surprisingly, hip injuries account for up to 17% of injuries in dancers and 27% among professional dancers.

Image by sobima from Pixabay

by Joanne Barker, Boston Children’s Hospital via Medical Xpress March 29, 2023

Micro-instability: No small problem for dancers

Conditions such as hip dysplasia and impingement are well studied. In recent years, however, hip and sports medicine specialists at Boston Children’s Hospital have expanded their focus to include micro-instability, excess movement of the ball (femoral head) inside the hip socket (acetabulum).

“We believe micro motions inside the hip joint overload the cartilage, muscles, and tendons around the joint,” says Andrea Stracciolini, MD, director of Medical Sports Medicine at Boston Children’s Hospital. The condition, also known as femoroacetabular translation, can lead to pain, impaired function, and early osteoarthritis.

In a study published in the BMJ Open Sport and Exercise Medicine, Stracciolini and her colleagues in the Sports Medicine Division analyzed hip micro-instability in dancers and other athletes.

The team’s research sheds light on this little-understood but clinically relevant condition. It also points to the potential of dynamic hip ultrasonography to support more accurate diagnoses, non-operative therapies, and more informed surgical planning for patients who need surgery.

In dancers, painful hips are often unstable hips

Using dynamic hip ultrasound, the team compared the incidence and severity of micro-instability in female dancers with hip pain, female dancers without hip pain and non-dance female athletes.

Of 171 subjects (average age 22), 62 were dancers with hip pain. Non-dance participants’ primary sports included gymnastics, cheering, figure skating, soccer, and basketball.

In a further sub-analysis, researchers compared a small cohort of 34 symptomatic dancers to 53 asymptomatic dancers of comparable age, height, and body mass index.

Results

Dancers with hip pain tended to have greater micro-instability than non-dance athletes with hip pain and dancers with no hip pain. Nearly two thirds of dancers with hip pain also met the criteria for hypermobility.

The results support a relationship between hip micro-instability and hip injury in dancers. The fact that micro-instability was less common in non-dance athletes with hip pain suggests that their sports predispose them to different types of hip injuries.

Further, the greater incidence of hypermobility in dancers with hip pain than non-symptomatic dancers could indicate that extreme ranges of hip motion that can serve as an advantage in dance may also increase dancers’ risk.

Dynamic hip ultrasonography: Seeing hips in motion

In 2019, Stracciolini and her colleagues published a study showing that dynamic hip ultrasound can reliably assess micro-instability. Since then, the clinicians have continued to explore ways that ultrasonography can be used to inform management of complex hip pain in dancers and other athletes.

Unlike static images produced by MRI and radiologic imaging, dynamic hip ultrasound allows clinicians to see inside a patient’s joint as they move through a variety of positions. Patients can provide real-time feedback to help pinpoint which positions cause them pain. Ultrasound is also more efficient, safe, and cost-effective that traditional imaging.

“Ultrasound gives us another piece of the puzzle to understand micro-instability,” says Stracciolini. “The next step will be to establish normal values in different athletes: dancers, soccer players, and swimmers for instance, so that clinicians can use ultrasound to differentiate between a healthy hip and a damaged hip.”

Source Boston Children’s Hospital via Medical Xpress

  References

Femoroacetabular translation in female athletes and dancers assessed by dynamic hip ultrasonography, Scott CP, d’Hemecourt PA, Miller PE, Sugimoto D, Jackson SS, Kobelski GP, Whitney KE, Stracciolini A. BMJ Open Sport Exerc Med. 2021 Dec 17;7(4):e001169. doi: 10.1136/bmjsem-2021-001169. Full text, PDF

Can Dynamic Ultrasonography of the Hip Reliably Assess Anterior Femoral Head Translation? d’Hemecourt PA, Sugimoto D, McKee-Proctor M, Zwicker RL, Jackson SS, Novais EN, Kim YJ, Millis MB, Stracciolini A. Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2019 May;477(5):1086-1098. doi: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000000457. Full text, PDF

  Further reading

Understanding hip pathology in ballet dancers, Singh Y, Pettit M, El-Hakeem O, Elwood R, Norrish A, Audenaert E, Khanduja V. Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2022 Oct;30(10):3546-3562. doi: 10.1007/s00167-022-06928-1. Epub 2022 Mar 19. Full text, PDF

Hip Instability in Ballet Dancers: A Narrative Review, Vera AM, Nho SJ, Mather RC, Wuerz TH, Harris JD. J Dance Med Sci. 2021 Sep 15;25(3):176-190. doi: 10.12678/1089-313X.091521c. Epub 2021 Jun 3. PMID: 34082862.

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