Osteitis Pubis: Causes, Symptoms & Treatment
Osteitis pubis is a painful inflammation of the pubic symphysis and surrounding bone. It commonly affects athletes and causes groin and pelvic pain that can significantly impact physical activity.
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Osteitis pubis is a painful inflammation of the pubic symphysis and surrounding bone. It commonly affects athletes and causes groin and pelvic pain that can significantly impact physical activity.
What is Osteitis Pubis?
Osteitis pubis is an inflammatory condition affecting the pubic symphysis -- the cartilaginous joint connecting the two pubic bones at the front of the pelvis -- as well as the adjacent bone structures. The condition leads to localized irritation and inflammation of this region, resulting in characteristic pain in the groin, lower abdomen, and pelvic area. It is most commonly seen in athletes but can also occur following pelvic surgery or during and after pregnancy.
Causes
Osteitis pubis can arise from a variety of causes, broadly categorized as sports-related and non-sports-related:
- Athletic overuse: Particularly common in soccer players, runners, ice hockey players, and other endurance or contact sport athletes. Repetitive stress from the adductor and abdominal muscles creates excessive traction forces on the pubic symphysis.
- Muscle imbalances: An imbalance between the adductors, abdominal muscles, and hip flexors increases mechanical load on the symphysis.
- Pregnancy and childbirth: Hormonal relaxation of the pelvic ligaments and the mechanical stress of delivery can trigger inflammation of the pubic symphysis.
- Pelvic surgery: Procedures such as radical prostatectomy, gynecological surgery, or inguinal hernia repair can irritate the symphysis.
- Infection: In rare cases, bacterial infection (septic osteitis pubis) may be the underlying cause, particularly following urological procedures.
- Inflammatory or rheumatic disease: Systemic conditions such as ankylosing spondylitis can involve the pubic symphysis.
Symptoms
The hallmark symptom of osteitis pubis is a deep, aching pain centered over the pubic symphysis, which may radiate to the groin, inner thighs, lower abdomen, or perineum. Common symptoms include:
- Tenderness directly over the pubic symphysis on palpation
- Pain when walking, climbing stairs, raising the leg, or spreading the legs apart
- Painful adductor muscles (inner thigh muscles)
- A waddling or wide-based gait in more severe cases
- Worsening pain during athletic activities such as sprinting, kicking, or changing direction
- Morning stiffness in the pelvic region
Diagnosis
The diagnosis of osteitis pubis is based on a combination of clinical assessment and imaging studies:
- Clinical examination: Characteristic tenderness over the pubic symphysis and positive adductor stress tests (e.g., adductor squeeze test).
- X-ray: In later stages, irregularities, sclerosis, or erosions at the symphysis may be visible on plain radiographs.
- MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging): The gold standard for imaging; it can detect early bone marrow edema, cartilage changes, and soft tissue involvement before X-ray changes appear.
- Ultrasound: Useful for assessing soft tissue structures and guiding injections.
- Laboratory tests: If infection or rheumatic disease is suspected, inflammatory markers (CRP, ESR) and a complete blood count are obtained.
Treatment
Conservative Treatment
The vast majority of patients respond well to non-surgical management. Treatment options include:
- Rest and activity modification: Consistent reduction in physical activity is the most important initial measure. Return to sport should be gradual and structured.
- Physiotherapy: Targeted strengthening of the core, hip, and pelvic floor muscles, combined with adductor stretching, to address underlying muscle imbalances.
- Medication: Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) such as ibuprofen or diclofenac help relieve pain and reduce inflammation.
- Corticosteroid injections: Local injections of corticosteroids into the symphysis can be effective for persistent symptoms.
- Shockwave therapy: Extracorporeal shockwave therapy may promote healing and reduce chronic pain.
- Platelet-Rich Plasma (PRP): Autologous blood injections into the symphysis are increasingly used and show promising results in clinical studies.
Surgical Treatment
Surgery is rarely required and is reserved for cases that are severe and unresponsive to all conservative measures. Surgical options include arthrodesis (fusion) of the pubic symphysis or curettage (removal of inflamed bone tissue).
Prognosis
With consistent and appropriate treatment, osteitis pubis generally resolves completely. However, recovery can take several weeks to months. Early diagnosis is critical in athletes to prevent the condition from becoming chronic. Recurrence is possible if return to sport is premature or if the underlying causes are not adequately addressed.
References
- Maffulli N, Loppini M, Longo UG et al. - Osteitis pubis in professional soccer players: a systematic review. British Journal of Sports Medicine, 2016.
- Hiti CJ, Stevens KJ, Jamati MK et al. - Athletic osteitis pubis. Sports Medicine, 2011; 41(5):361-376.
- Bharam S, Draovitch P, Fu FH - Osteitis pubis. In: DeLee, Drez & Miller's Orthopaedic Sports Medicine. Elsevier, 2015.
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Related search terms: Osteitis pubis + Pubic bone inflammation + Symphysitis pubis + Pubic symphysitis