Osteitis pubis

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Osteitis pubis
Classification and external resources
File:Skeletpelvis-pubis.jpg
#5 is Pubic symphysis
DiseasesDB 33068
eMedicine pmr/92 sports/90

Osteitis pubis is a medical condition which is prevalent among footballers, runners and other athletes, particularly players of Australian rules football. In Australia the condition is increasingly being referred to as simply "OP", especially in media covering the Australian Football League.

Presentation

Osteitis pubis, first described in 1924,[1] is characterised by inflammation of the pubic symphysis, which is the joint at the front of the pelvis between the two ends of the pubic bone. This inflammation leads to sclerosis and bony changes of the pubis symphysis, causing both acute and chronic groin pain. The condition can render sufferers incapable of sustained physical activity. There is no specific treatment for the condition and it can seriously affect the careers of footballers affected by it.

Causes

The cause of osteitis pubis is excessive physical strain on the pubic bone, usually caused by the increasing rigorous demands of competitive sport, particularly football and AFL football. In such sports, actions such as running, jumping, kicking and rapid changes of direction cause the abdominal and groin muscles to exercise a pulling or traction force on the pubic bone, which in some cases can result in excessive stress and inflammation. In Australian football this risk is increased by repeated jarring of the pelvis caused when players come down from the high leaps required by the game, and also by tackling from other players. This also forces the pain to arise when performing kicking motions.

In the pre-antibiotic era it was an occasional complication of pelvic surgery and in particular of retropubic prostatectomy.

Apart from an incident occurring during rigorous competitive sport or resulting from pregnancy, osteitis pubis can be categorized into two main groups:

Overload (or training errors).

  • Exercising on hard surfaces, like concrete.
  • Exercising on uneven ground.
  • Beginning an exercise program after a long lay-off period.
  • Increasing exercise intensity or duration too quickly.
  • Exercising in worn out or ill fitting shoes.

Biomechanical Inefficiencies

  • Faulty foot and body mechanics and gait disturbances.
  • Poor running or walking mechanics.
  • Tight, stiff muscles in the hips, groin and buttocks.
  • Muscular imbalances.
  • Leg length differences.

Symptoms

The symptoms of osteitis pubis can include loss of flexibility in the groin region, a dull aching pain in the groin, or in more severe cases a sharp stabbing pain when running, kicking, changing directions, or even during routine activities such as standing up or getting out of a car.

Imaging

Osteitis pubis may be diagnosed with an X-ray, where irregularity and widening of the pubic symphysis are hallmark findings.  Similar change is also demonstrated with Computed Tomography (CT) however the multi-planar nature of CT has a higher sensitivity than X-rays.  Though not well visualised on ultrasound, thickening of the superior joint capsule with cyst formation is a clue to the diagnosis, as well as secondary changes (tendinosis) of the adjacent adductor muscles (particularly adductor longus) and rectus abdominis. Ultrasound is also useful for excluding a hernia, which may co-exist with osteitis pubis and thus may also warrant additional treatment.  

Both ultrasound and CT may be used for injecting the pubic symphysis with corticosteroid as part of an athlete's treatment programme [2]. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) combines the diagnostic advantages of CT and ultrasound, also showing bone marrow oedema and has the advantages of not being operator dependent, unlike ultrasound, nor does it use radiation, such as CT and X-rays.  As such, MRI is the modality of choice [3].

Incidence

The incidence of osteitis pubis among Australian footballers has increased sharply over the past decade. There are believed to be three reasons for this:

  • The increasing physical demands of Australian rules football. As the game has become more professionalised, with players becoming full-time athletes, such factors as running speed, kicking length, jumping and tackling have all increased, placing increasing stress on the pubic region.
  • The increasing hardness of the surfaces of football grounds. Grounds are better drained than in the past, and the game is increasingly played in roofed stadiums in which the grounds receive no rain. Australian football evolved as a winter game played on soft, muddy grounds, and modern surfaces have made muscle and bone injuries more common.
  • The increasing demand for size and strength among footballers. This has led young players to concentrate on building muscle mass before their bodies are fully mature. The additional strain that highly developed abdominal muscles place on the pubic bone explains the higher prevalence of osteitis pubis on young players. Some develop the condition while still playing school-level football.

Treatment and prevention

Until recently there was no specific treatment for osteitis pubis. As it frequently causes long-term problems, medication, stretching and strengthening of the stabilising muscles are usually used. Topol, in Argentina, used glucose and lignocaine injections (prolotherapy or regenerative injection therapy) to restart the healing process and generate new connective tissue in 72 elite athletes with chronic groin/abdominal pain who had failed a conservative treatment trial. The treatment consisted of monthly injections to ligament attachments on the pubis. Their pain had lasted an average of 11 months, ranging from 3–60 months. The average number of treatments received was 3, ranging from 1–6. Their pain improved by 82%. Six athletes did not improve, and the remaining 66 returned to unrestricted sport in an average of 3 months.[4] Surgical intervention, such as wedge resection of the pubis symphysis, is sometimes attempted in severe cases[5], but its success rate is not high, and surgery may lead to later pelvic problems.

The Australian Football League has taken some steps to reduce the incidence of osteitis pubis, in particular recommending that clubs restrict the amount of body building which young players are required to carry out, and in general reducing the physical demands on players before their bodies mature.

Osteitis Pubis if not treated early and correctly can more often than not end a sporting individuals career or give them an uncertain playing future.

Pregnancy

Damage can occur to the ligaments surrounding and bridging the pubic joint (symphysis) as a result of the hormone Relaxin which is secreted around the time of birth, to soften the pelvic ligaments for labor. At this time repetitive stress or falling, tripping, slipping can injure ligaments more easily. Usually after childbirth the hormone disappears and the ligaments become strong again. In some women the weakness persists and activities such as carrying a baby or stepping up even a small step can cause a slight but continual separation or shearing in the ligaments of the symphysis, where they attach to the joint surfaces, even causing lesions in the fibrocartilage and pubic bones. Symptoms include one or more of the following; pain in the pubic area, hips, lower back and thighs. This can take months or years to settle. X-rays taken during the early stages of osteitis pubis can be misleading, you may feel the pain but the damage doesn't appear on the films, unless stork views are obtained (i.e. standing on one leg). As the process continues, later pictures will show evidence of bony erosion in the pubic bones. Osteitis pubis can also be associated with pelvic girdle pain.

See also

References

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External links

el:Οστεΐτις Ηβικής Συμφύσεως

it:Pubalgia
  1. Beer E. "Periostitis of Symphysis and Descending Rami of Pubis Following Suprapubic Operations". Intervat J Med & Surg. 37:224-225. 1924.
  2. Koulouris G. (2008). "Imaging review of groin pain in elite athletes: an anatomic approach to imaging findings". AJR Am J Roentgenol. 191 (4): 962–972. doi:10.2214/AJR.07.3410. PMID pmid18806129 Check |pmid= value (help). 
  3. Zoga AC, Kavanagh EC, Omar IM, Morrison WB, Koulouris G, Lopez H, Chaabra A, Domesek J, Meyers WC. (2008). "Athletic pubalgia and the "sports hernia": MR imaging findings". Radiology. 247 (3): 797–807. doi:10.1148/radiol.2473070049. PMID pmid18487535 Check |pmid= value (help). 
  4. (Topol GA, Reeves KD: Regenerative injection of elite athletes with career-altering chronic groin pain who fail conservative treatment: a consecutive case series. Am J Phys Med Rehabil 2008;87;890-902)
  5. Paajanen H, Hermunen H, Karonen J (2007). "Pubic Magnetic Resonance Imaging Findings in Surgically and Conservatively Treated Athletes With Osteitis Pubis Compared to Asymptomatic Athletes During Heavy Training". Am J Sports Med. 36 (1): 117. doi:10.1177/0363546507305454. PMID 17702996.