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Journal ArticleDOI

Sacroiliac joint pain referral zones

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TLDR
Pain referral from the sacroiliac joint does not appear to be limited to the lumbar region and buttock, and a statistically significant relationship was identified between pain location and age, with younger patients more likely to describe pain distal to the knee.
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This article is published in Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation.The article was published on 2000-03-01. It has received 252 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Sacroiliac joint dysfunction & Sacroiliac joint.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Sacroiliac joint pain: a comprehensive review of anatomy, diagnosis, and treatment.

TL;DR: A comprehensive review of the anatomy, function, and mechanisms of injury of the SI joint, along with a systematic assessment of its diagnosis and treatment is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

How often is low back pain not coming from the back

TL;DR: For patients presenting to a spine surgeon’s clinic for LBP, up to 25% of patients may have significant pain contribution from the hip or SI joints, and an additional 10% will still have an undefined pain source even after diagnostic workup, underscores the need for clinicians to be aware of nonspinal pain generators.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sacroiliac Joint Pain

TL;DR: Treatment modalities include medications, physical therapy, bracing, manual therapy, injections, radiofrequency denervation, and arthrodesis; however, no published prospective data compare the efficacy of these modalities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sacroiliac joint pain: a comprehensive review of epidemiology, diagnosis and treatment

TL;DR: Evidence supports both intra- and extra-articular causes for SIJ pain, with clinical studies demonstrating intermediate-term benefit for both intra-, extra-artsicular steroid injections and radiofrequency denervation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The powerful placebo

Henry K. Beecher
- 24 Dec 1955 - 
TL;DR: It is interesting that Pepper could say as recently as 10 years ago "apparently there has never been a paper published discussing the important subject of the placebo," but in 1953 Gaddum1 said: Such tablets are sometimes called placebos, but it is better to call them dummies.
Journal ArticleDOI

The sacroiliac joint in chronic low back pain.

TL;DR: The sacroiliac joint is a significant source of pain in patients with chronic low back pain and warrants further study, and its prevalence, validity, and the validity of pain provocation are established.
Book

Clinical Anatomy of the Lumbar Spine and Sacrum

TL;DR: The Lumbar Vertebrae are described as well as the Sacrum, the Sacro-Iliac Joint, the Intervertebral Discs, and the Zygapophysial Joints, which are connected to the Tournaisian Spine.
Journal ArticleDOI

Results of sacroiliac joint double block and value of sacroiliac pain provocation tests in 54 patients with low back pain.

TL;DR: The present study suggests the sacroiliac joint is an uncommon but real source of low back pain, and the accuracy of some of the presumed “sacroiliAC pain provocation tests” is questioned.
Book

The adult spine : principles and practice

TL;DR: General issues of spinal disorders: general operative considerations diagnostic studies general and degenerative conditions metabolic disease inflammatory disorders spinal injury spinal neoplasms and vascular malformations epidemiology, disability and societal impact.
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