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Full Report

Welcome to your free report covering the diagnosis, management and treatment options, exercises and equipment that could help in rehabilitation. Scroll down to read more or use the sidebar icons to skip ahead.

Diagnosis

Bone Bruise or Bursitis

On the outside of your hip you have a piece of bone called the trochanter. This piece of bone is part of your thigh bone, the femur, and it used as an anchor point for various muscles. The hip muscles which attach onto here are the gluteus maximus, gluteus medius, gluteus minimus, piriformis, obturator externus, obturator internus and quadratus femoris. Their role is to move your leg outwards into abduction, rotate the leg outwards into external rotation, and also help with keeping the leg and pelvis stable in weight bearing activities such as walking and running. The muscles attach onto the trochanter by tendons. A tendons role is to attach muscle to bone, and help transfer the energy produced by the muscle into movement. These tendons are very strong and adaptable to the load and activity that they are required to perform. The final structure to be aware is a bursa. Bursa are fluid filled sacs and they help provide smooth movements of the tendon across bone, and you have one of these on the outside of your hip on top of the trochanter.
After falling onto the outside or back of your hip one of these structures could be injured, or perhaps a combination of all of them to some extent. How much damage these structures suffered will be dictated by the force of the fall, what you fell onto, your general body type, and any underlying health issues which may be affecting your bone strength.

Ask yourself the following questions. Did the area of pain bruised immediately after the injury, if there is swelling present, is there pain if you touch the bony point on the outside of your hip, and is there pain if you stand on the affected leg for longer than 30 seconds? If you answered 'yes' to at least three you should be assessed in person by your family doctor or physiotherapist. These symptoms would be suggestive of a fracture to the area and the treatment would need a specialist to review where they may send you for an x-ray to confirm if there is any fracture present. If however you did not answer 'yes' to at least three of these questions we can presume you have instead a bone bruise.

A bone bruise is when the bone has been damaged but is still structurally sound, similar to getting a bruise elsewhere on your body. A bursitis is when the bursa on your hip is irritated and most likely swollen, causing you pain. Trying to pinpoint specifically in the early stages which one you have, and you could have both, is difficult but as the treatment is the same in the acute phase it doesn't really matter. As you move through the healing stages it will become clearer if you only have one and at that stage can treat more specifically. It would be reasonable to also presume there is some general soft tissue damage of the muscles surrounding the hip, which would result in some pain and tightness.

Treatment for a bone bruise or bursitis on the outside of your hip is to initially rest the area from any aggravating activities. This may be tough at times because you use your hip muscles with so many daily activities, but by reducing certain activities, or Simply reducing the duration of some daily activities will help settle the initial pain. Any unnecessary and strenuous activities should be stopped in this initial phase, such as running or playing sports. Because you use the muscles which attach onto trochanter with walking and standing, it is almost impossible to completely rest the muscle in this area. But you can reduce the duration of how long you perform these daily tasks which will give the area the best chance on healing. You can still perform exercises which don't aggravate your hip which will ensure the other muscles in your legs and hip remain strong, and will also help promote blood flow to the area and keep the mobility in your hip, both of which will help with your healing process. You then want to slowly build up loading these muscles to return you back to your pre-injury level.

If at the end of Phase 2 after a period of relative rest you are still struggling with daily activities, it would be helpful to be reviewed by your family doctor or physiotherapist to ensure there is nothing underlying which needs further assessment and attention.

The important thing to remember is that bone bruising and bursitis will settle but it requires some patience initially resting, and then slowly building up as your hip heals.

Management

Click each phase heading to see the progression of your management programme.

Equipment

Exercises