Piriformis syndrome
Background
- Irritation of the sciatic nerve from the piriformis muscle
Clinical Features
- Pain in area of buttocks and hamstring muscles
- Worsened by sitting, climbing stairs, or squatting
Differential Diagnosis
Hip pain
Acute Trauma
- Femur fracture
- Proximal
- Intracapsular
- Extracapsular
- Shaft
- Mid-shaft femur fracture (all subtrochanteric)
- Proximal
- Hip dislocation
- Pelvic fractures
Chronic/Atraumatic
- Hip bursitis
- Psoas abscess
- Piriformis syndrome
- Meralgia paresthetica
- Septic arthritis
- Obturator nerve entrapment
- Avascular necrosis of hip
Evaluation
- May have palpable, tender mass over piriformis muscle
- Consider when patient has classic signs of lumbar radiculopathy with negative provocative testing, normal neurologic exam
- Provocative testing with Freiburgs test: placing hip in extension and internal rotation, and then resisting external rotation
- Pain or sciatic symptoms yield a positive test
Management
- Conservative
