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Ultrasound of the adult hip.

The adult hip is a new and challenging site for evaluation with ultrasound (US). Clinically, diseases involving the hip region may be difficult to diagnose without the help of imaging. The hip region is a crossroad for numerous vascular, nervous, and muscular structures that pass between the trunk and the lower extremity. Thus, inflammatory processes and neoplasms may spread to and from the hip, buttock, thigh, pelvis, and retroperitoneum, and trauma may also effect the adjacent areas of the trunk and thigh. Because it is a crossroad, many conditions that are not specific to the hip occur in this area, including inguinal lymphadenopathy, pathology from the abdomen or the genitalia (intestinal hernia, inflammation, and infection), and even referred pain from spinal disorders. The goals of US imaging are the detection and localization of these pathological processes, the differentiation of intra-articular andextra-articular pathology, and the performance of diagnostic and therapeutic interventional procedures. This article reviews the hip anatomy, followed up by a discussion of the US evaluation and differential diagnosis of common pathology occurring in the hip area. This includes joint effusion, arthritis, loose bodies, bursitis, pseudoaneurysm, muscle and tendon diseases, as well as tumor and tumor-like lesions such as hematoma, abscess, and lymphadenopathy.

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