Hip Injections
X-ray Guided Hip Injections
Ultrasound Guided Hip Injections
Hip joint injections involve injecting medicine directly into the hip joint to diagnose the source of pain or treat pain due to conditions such as labral tears of the hip joint. Hip pain may be experienced in the hip, buttock, leg or low back. The injection contains a combination of a numbing medicine and cortisone (an anti-inflammatory agent). Numbing medicine delivers temporary relief from pain, provided the hip joint is the source of the pain. It thus serves a diagnostic function and helps to confirm or deny whether the joint is the source of pain. Cortisone serves to reduce the inflammation in the joint providing long term pain benefit.
Procedure
The small area where the injection needs to be given is numbed with an anesthetic. A small needle is then accurately placed by the doctor into the joint guided by the real-time X-ray images (fluoroscopy) or ultrasound. A combination of anesthetic and anti-inflammatory cortisone is then slowly injected into the joint.
After the procedure
After the injection, the patient is then asked to move the joint, provoking pain. The patient may or may not find a decrease in pain depending on whether the injected joint is the main source of the pain. The patient is also asked to maintain a record of relief in pain for a couple of weeks after the injection. Physical therapy may also be recommended. Even when pain relief is significant, the patient should increase activities gradually over one to two weeks.
Risk and complications
The possible risks of hip injections include: swelling and pain in the joint after the injection, infection, depigmentation of skin, local thinning of the skin and rupture of a tendon.
If the injected hip joint is the source of the pain, the pain may reduce two to five days after the injection. However, if no improvement is found within ten days after the injection further diagnostic tests may be required to ascertain the cause of pain.