When Your Hip Hurts: Listening to Your Body’s Signal for Care
Hip pain is rarely “just part of aging”—and it shouldn’t be dismissed as simple soreness from a long day. While occasional discomfort may resolve on its own, persistent, sharp, or movement-limiting hip pain often signals an underlying issue that deserves attention. Ignoring it won’t make it vanish; it may only allow the problem to deepen.
Your hip is a marvel of biomechanical engineering—a ball-and-socket joint supported by cartilage, tendons, ligaments, muscles, and nerves. Pain here can originate within the joint itself—or travel from nearby structures like the lower back, pelvis, or knees. Understanding the source matters. Early awareness often means simpler solutions and preserved mobility down the road.
Six Common Sources of Hip Pain
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Condition
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What It Feels Like
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Why It Happens
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|---|---|---|
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Osteoarthritis
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Deep ache in the groin; stiffness upon waking; grinding sensation during movement
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Gradual cartilage breakdown leads to bone-on-bone friction
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Trochanteric Bursitis
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Sharp or burning pain on the outer hip; worse when lying on that side or climbing stairs
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Inflammation of fluid-filled sacs (bursae) that cushion the hip joint
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Tendinitis or Strain
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Aching or pulling sensation in the front, side, or back of the hip—often after new activity
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Overuse or tightness in hip flexors, hamstrings, or glutes
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Labral Tear
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Deep groin pain with clicking, catching, or a sense of instability
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Tear in the cartilage ring (labrum) that seals the hip socket—common in athletes or those with hip structural variations
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Referred Spinal Pain
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Dull ache in the buttock or posterior hip; possible tingling down the leg
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Nerve compression in the lower back (e.g., sciatica or spinal stenosis)
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|
Stress Fracture or Avascular Necrosis
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Sudden, severe pain after repetitive impact (fracture) or progressive deep pain (avascular necrosis)
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Bone injury from overuse or loss of blood supply to bone tissue—often linked to trauma, steroid use, or certain medical conditions
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When to Seek Prompt Medical Evaluation
Continued on the next page
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