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  2. Hip Pain: The Most Common Causes & How to Prevent It - AOL

    www.aol.com/hip-pain-most-common-causes...

    Inner hip pain. Pain on your high-inner leg could point to a groin injury. The groin comprises several muscles that attach to the inner thigh. Outer hip pain.

  3. Howship–Romberg sign - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Howship–Romberg_sign

    The Howship–Romberg sign is inner thigh pain on internal rotation of the hip. It can be caused by an obturator hernia. [1] [2] [3] It is named for John Howship and Moritz Heinrich Romberg. [4] [5] [6]

  4. Pelvic girdle pain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pelvic_girdle_pain

    Pain in hips and/or restriction of hip movement. Transferred nerve pain down leg. Can be associated with bladder and/or bowel dysfunction. A feeling of the symphysis pubis giving way. Stooped back when standing. Malalignment of pelvic and/or back joints. Struggle to sit or stand. Pain may also radiate down the inner thighs. Waddling or ...

  5. Cremasteric reflex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cremasteric_reflex

    This reflex is elicited by lightly stroking or poking the superior and medial (inner) part of the thigh—regardless of the direction of stroke. [1] The normal response is an immediate contraction of the cremaster muscle that pulls up the testicle ipsilaterally (on the same side of the body). The reflex utilizes sensory and motor fibers from ...

  6. Sacroiliac joint dysfunction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacroiliac_joint_dysfunction

    Each innominate bone (ilium) joins the femur (thigh bone) to form the hip joint; thus the sacroiliac joint moves with walking and movement of the torso. [9] In this joint, hyaline cartilage on the sacral side moves against fibrocartilage on the iliac side. The sacroiliac joint contains numerous ridges and depressions that function in stability.

  7. Osteitis pubis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osteitis_pubis

    Osteitis pubis is a noninfectious inflammation of the pubis symphysis (also known as the pubic symphysis, symphysis pubis, or symphysis pubica), causing varying degrees of lower abdominal and pelvic pain. Osteitis pubis was first described in patients who had undergone suprapubic surgery, and it remains a well-known complication of invasive ...

  8. 30 exercises to tone your entire core and reduce back pain - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/27-core-exercises-abs-back...

    Keep the shoulders relaxed, abs pulled in and the inner thighs squeezing together. Windshield wipers Lie on your back with your arms straight out at your sides in a “T” position for stabilization.

  9. Femoral nerve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Femoral_nerve

    In the thigh, the nerve lies in a groove between iliacus muscle and psoas major muscle, outside the femoral sheath, and lateral to the femoral artery. After a short course of about 4 cm in the thigh, the nerve is divided into anterior and posterior divisions, separated by lateral femoral circumflex artery. The branches are shown below: [1]