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The purpose of the investigators is to determine the frequency of priformis syndrome in patients presenting with hip and/or leg pain and to investigate the association of Priformis syndrome with other pathologies of the lumbar spine and hip.
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Priformis Syndrome is a neuromuscular disorder characterized by compression or irritation of the sciatic nerve under the piriformis muscle, tenderness in the piriformis muscle, and back, hip, and leg pain. The pain may radiate along the sciatic nerve trace in the gluteal region and posterior thigh. Diagnosis is based on clinical symptoms, specific physical examination findings, and positive response to local injection.
The diagnosis of piriformis syndrome is usually made only after lumbar spine pathologies are excluded. This traditional approach leads to underdiagnosis of piriformis syndrome. More than one cause may coexist in hip and/or leg pain.The existence of one cause does not exclude the other.Priformis syndrome should not be a diagnosis of exclusion.
In the differential diagnosis of hip and/or leg pain, physical examination to exclude piriformis syndrome and injection of local anesthetic into the piriformis muscle is much less invasive than surgery to confirm lumbar spine pathology and can be performed as an outpatient.Thus, early diagnosis and appropriate treatment process is accelerated. If there is an unfavorable response to the local injection, investigation for lumbar vertebral pathologies can be initiated.
The purpose of the investigators under this information and justifications is; To determine the frequency of Priformis syndrome in patients presenting with hip and/or leg pain and to investigate the association of Priformis syndrome with other pathologies of the lumbar spine and hip.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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