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Femoroacetabular Impingement: Causes, Symptoms, and Treatment

I am Dr. Md. Iftekharul Alam, and in my orthopedic practice I often see patients with hip pain who have been living with the problem for months before the real cause is identified. Femoroacetabular impingement, often called FAI or hip impingement, is one of those conditions.

In simple terms, FAI means the ball and socket of the hip do not move against each other as smoothly as they should. That abnormal contact can irritate the labrum, the cartilage, and the joint lining. Over time, it may cause pain, stiffness, clicking, and limitation of movement. In some patients, it may also contribute to early wear of the hip joint.

This page is written for Bangladeshi patients and families who want a clear explanation of hip impingement, how I evaluate it, and when treatment becomes important.

What Femoroacetabular Impingement Means

The hip is a ball-and-socket joint. The top of the thigh bone is the ball, and the acetabulum is the socket in the pelvis. In femoroacetabular impingement, the shape of the ball, the shape of the socket, or both create extra contact during movement.

There are two common structural patterns:

Cam type

In cam impingement, the ball-and-neck junction of the femur is not shaped as smoothly as expected. This can cause the bone to rub against the socket during hip motion.

Pincer type

In pincer impingement, the socket covers the femoral head a little too much or is shaped in a way that causes pinching.

Mixed type

Many patients have a combination of both patterns.

The important point for patients is not the label. The important point is that the hip may be pinching abnormally during certain movements, especially flexion, rotation, and deep bending.

Symptoms I Look For

The most common symptom is pain in the groin or deep in the front of the hip. Some patients describe pain in the side of the hip or even in the buttock. The pattern matters more than the exact word the patient uses.

Common symptoms include:

  • groin pain during sitting, squatting, or bending
  • stiffness in the hip
  • pain while getting in or out of a car
  • discomfort when sitting cross-legged
  • pain during sports that involve twisting, sprinting, or pivoting
  • clicking, catching, or a feeling that the hip is blocked
  • reduced ability to move the hip fully

In Bangladesh, I often hear from younger adults who first assume the pain is a muscle pull, back pain, or simple overuse. Sometimes that is true. But when the same hip pain keeps returning with the same movements, the joint itself deserves proper evaluation.

Why Hip Impingement Can Be Missed

FAI is not always obvious in the early stage. The pain may come and go. Many patients can walk normally but still feel pain when they sit for a long time, squat, climb stairs, or move into a deep hip position.

It can also be confused with other problems such as:

  • low back pain
  • groin strain
  • sports injury
  • early arthritis
  • bursitis
  • sacroiliac joint pain

That is why I do not rely on one symptom alone. I look at the full story, the physical examination, and the imaging together.

How I Evaluate a Patient With Suspected FAI

When I assess hip pain, I begin with a careful history. I want to know where the pain is, which movements trigger it, how long it has been present, and whether the patient has difficulty with work, travel, sport, or daily activities.

I also ask about:

  • sitting for long periods
  • squatting or kneeling
  • sports such as football, cricket, running, or gym training
  • previous injury
  • morning stiffness
  • clicking or catching in the hip
  • pain in both hips or only one

Then I examine hip motion, gait, strength, and special tests that may reproduce impingement-type pain.

Imaging that may help

X-rays often show the bone shape. In selected patients, MRI or MR arthrogram may help if I suspect labral or cartilage injury. Sometimes CT scanning is useful for surgical planning.

A practical point

A scan alone does not make the diagnosis. Some people have bony shape changes on imaging but little or no pain. Others have clear symptoms even when the first scan seems mild. The diagnosis must match the patient’s story and examination.

Treatment Options

Treatment depends on symptoms, examination findings, imaging, age, activity level, and whether there is associated labral or cartilage injury.

Non-Surgical Treatment

Not every patient with FAI needs surgery. In fact, many patients should begin with non-surgical care.

This may include:

  • activity modification
  • physiotherapy
  • hip and core strengthening
  • movement retraining
  • temporary reduction of painful sports or deep squatting
  • pain control when appropriate

In my practice, I usually explain to patients that the goal is not to stop all movement. The goal is to stop the repeated movements that keep provoking pain while building better control around the hip and pelvis.

Hip Care by Dr. Md. Iftekharul Alam

For many Bangladeshi patients, practical changes matter a lot. Long sitting during traffic, low chairs, frequent cross-legged sitting, repeated squatting, or intense gym work can all aggravate symptoms in the wrong patient.

When Surgery May Be Considered

If a patient has persistent pain, failed rehabilitation, and imaging and examination that fit FAI, hip arthroscopy may be discussed.

The purpose of surgery is usually to improve the abnormal contact, treat associated labral damage when present, and help the hip move more smoothly. It is not a shortcut, and it is not the right answer for every patient.

I am careful with expectations. Surgery may help pain and function in the right patient, but outcome depends on the exact problem, the amount of joint damage, the timing of treatment, and how seriously the rehabilitation plan is followed.

When I Worry About Urgent Problems

Most FAI cases are not emergencies. Still, some hip symptoms need urgent assessment and should not be waited on.

Seek prompt medical review if there is:

  • severe hip pain after a fall or accident
  • inability to bear weight
  • obvious deformity
  • fever with hip pain
  • rapidly worsening weakness
  • numbness or loss of sensation
  • severe swelling, redness, or warmth around the joint

These features may point to fracture, infection, dislocation, or another serious problem that needs urgent care.

Daily Life Advice for Patients in Bangladesh

Patients often ask what to do while waiting for assessment or treatment.

My practical advice is:

  • avoid repeated deep squats if they clearly trigger pain
  • avoid forcing the hip into painful twisting positions
  • reduce long periods of cramped sitting when possible
  • keep active, but choose movements that do not repeatedly provoke symptoms
  • do not ignore recurring groin pain just because you can still walk

If a patient works in a job that involves prolonged sitting, physical labor, or frequent stairs, I try to tailor advice to that reality. The right plan should fit real life in Dhaka and other parts of Bangladesh.

When to See an Orthopedic Specialist

You should consider orthopedic evaluation if:

  • hip pain keeps returning
  • groin pain is worse with sitting or squatting
  • there is stiffness or clicking in the hip
  • sports performance is falling because of hip pain
  • simple rest has not solved the problem

Early evaluation can help prevent long delays, unnecessary self-treatment, and confusion with back or muscle pain.

When I Think Arthroscopy May Be Worth Discussing

I usually think more seriously about hip arthroscopy when symptoms are persistent, movement testing strongly suggests impingement, imaging supports the diagnosis, and conservative care has not helped enough. The patient also needs realistic expectations, because not every hip pinch-like symptom improves with an operation.

When impingement needs a more focused arthroscopy discussion

Femoroacetabular impingement should be assessed in the context of symptoms, imaging, range of motion, and response to rehabilitation. Some patients do well with load modification and strengthening, while others continue to have mechanical pain that makes arthroscopic treatment more relevant.
In Bangladesh, I usually try to connect the imaging findings directly to the patient’s daily limitations before discussing surgery.

References

  1. AAOS OrthoInfo: Femoroacetabular Impingement
  2. PubMed: Review of femoroacetabular impingement syndrome
  3. PubMed: Femoroacetabular impingement: current concepts in diagnosis and treatment
  4. MedlinePlus: Hip pain

Who May and May Not Benefit From Hip Arthroscopy

Not every patient with hip pain or an abnormal shape on imaging is a good arthroscopy candidate. I look for symptom pattern, impingement signs, cartilage condition, activity goals, and the presence of established arthritis before recommending surgery.

In Bangladesh, that careful selection helps patients avoid an operation that is unlikely to improve stiffness or pain when the main problem is already advanced joint degeneration rather than a correctable impingement pattern.

When I think arthroscopy may be relevant

Femoroacetabular impingement becomes more significant when there is groin pain with flexion, twisting discomfort, reduced range of motion, and failure of sensible non-operative treatment. Arthroscopy may be discussed when the symptoms, imaging, and functional limitation point to a correctable mechanical problem.

In Bangladesh, I also discuss whether the patient can commit to rehabilitation afterward, because surgery alone does not restore movement patterns automatically. The decision has to fit both the hip problem and the practical recovery plan.

About Dr. Md. Iftekharul Alam

Dr. Md. Iftekharul Alam, MBBS (Dhaka), MS (Nitore/Pangu Hospital), F.A.C.S (USA), F.I.J.R (Kolkata), F.A.S.M (Osaka, Japan) is an Orthopedic Surgery specialist focused on arthroscopy and arthroplasty. He is an Assistant Professor at the National Institute of Traumatology and Orthopedic Rehabilitation (NITOR). His clinical focus includes knee and shoulder arthroscopy, hip and knee replacement, sports injuries, ACL and PCL injuries, trauma surgery, and other joint conditions.

FAQs BY PATIENTS

Some cases of femoro acetabular impingement improve with careful non-surgical treatment such as rest, physiotherapy, activity modification, splinting, medicine, or guided rehabilitation. Surgery is usually considered only when symptoms remain significant, the structure is clearly damaged, or function is not returning as expected.

I encourage patients to seek evaluation if pain, weakness, swelling, locking, instability, numbness, or loss of movement is interfering with daily life. The earlier the diagnosis is clarified, the easier it often is to choose the right treatment pathway.

Not every patient needs advanced imaging immediately. The best test depends on the history, the examination, and whether the concern is bone, ligament, tendon, cartilage, nerve, or inflammatory disease.

Treatment usually starts with the least invasive option that fits the diagnosis, such as medicine, physiotherapy, bracing, injection, or guided rehabilitation. Surgery is more likely when there is a significant tear, instability, deformity, nerve compression, or failure of appropriate conservative care.

Urgent review is important for severe swelling, a hot or red joint with fever, inability to bear weight, sudden major weakness, numbness, circulation changes, or pain after major trauma. These findings can suggest infection, fracture, dislocation, or another problem that should not be delayed.

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