Information
Editors
Meralgia Paraesthetica
Essentials
- Entrapment of the lateral femoral cutaneous nerve in the inguinal area
- Seen especially in middle-aged overweight persons.
- Symptoms include numbness, paraesthesias and burning pain in the anterior and lateral aspects of the thigh, which is aggravated by all movements of the hip region.
- The diagnosis is clinical; machine-assisted diagnostic investigations are needed in special cases only.
- High tendency of spontaneous recovery
Epidemiology
- Incidence 4.3/10 000 person years
- Occurs most commonly in the age of 30 to 40 years, more common in men.
Aetiology
- The nerve entrapment is mostly located under the inguinal ligament, approximately 2 cm medially of the anterior superior iliac spine, but the location may vary according to the individual anatomical passage of the nerve.
- In more than 30% of people the nerve has an aberrant course.
- Symptoms are worsened by
- mechanical factors at the areas of the nerve passage: overweight, pregnancy, tight clothing
- metabolic factors: diabetes, alcohol
- iatrogenic factors: hip and back surgery
- The aetiological factor is not necessarily found.
- May be bilateral.
Diagnosis
- Hyperextension of the thigh with the knee flexed increases the pain.
- Compression of the entrapment site causes radiating pain into the thigh.
- The clinical picture does not include motor symptoms.
- Root compression is ruled out by using the straight leg rising test (Lasègue's test) and testing hip movements to rule out osteoarthritis-induced limitation.
- Electroneurophysiological tests may be used if necessary in patients with severe symptoms; the interpretation may be problematic in obese patients.
- Diagnostic local nerve block
Differential diagnosis
- Trochanteric pain Trochanteric Pain
- Insertion pain of the quadriceps muscle
- Radicular symptom from the lumbar spine (L3)
- Neuropathy (prolonged meralgia may, however, also cause neuropathic pain)
Treatment
- Often resolves spontaneously when mechanical pressure is diminished Treatment for Meralgia Paraesthetica.
- Elimination of provoking factors (reduction of weight, avoidance of tight clothing)
- NSAIDs and cold packs, stretching exercises of hip flexors
- In a prolonged painful condition, drugs intended for the treatment of neuropathic pain can be used (tricyclic antidepressants, gabapentin, pregabalin)
- Glucocorticoid + local anaesthetic injections into the entrapment site; the injection can be repeated at a few weeks' intervals according to treatment response. The glucocorticoid may also be injected at multiple sites along the nerve in order to increase the effect.
- Nerve decompression by surgery may be considered if the condition is prolonged and shows no signs of spontaneous recovery.
References
- Cheatham SW, Kolber MJ, Salamh PA. Meralgia paresthetica: a review of the literature. Int J Sports Phys Ther 2013;8(6):883-93. [PubMed]