During pregnancy
Pain during pregnancy can have various causes. One possible cause is ectopic pregnancy. At the time when the symptoms occur, the women concerned are not yet aware that they are pregnant, as the symptoms appear just a few days after the egg has been fertilised.
Normally, the fertilised egg migrates along the fallopian tube to the uterus. There the cell nests in the uterus. For various reasons, transport problems within the fallopian tube can occur.
Then the egg cell nests inside the fallopian tube. However, there is not enough space for the growing cells to grow, which causes pain. An ectopic pregnancy is dangerous for women and in most cases must be surgically removed.
At later stages of the pregnancy, pain can occur for a variety of reasons. Simple and harmless causes would be, for example, movements of the child or the onset of contractions. It becomes dangerous for mother and child if the child lies badly in the uterus. This can either push off other structures in the mother’s abdomen or endanger herself. In spite of a pregnancy, one should never forget that other problems can also be causes for the pain.
At the hip
In most affected persons, hip pain is caused by orthopedic problems. The easiest to recognize cause is a fall on the affected body region. This is particularly common in older people who are no longer good at walking.
Since they are often not able to adequately cushion a fall, they usually fall onto the hip without braking. Typically, this results in a fracture of the neck of the femur. This means that the femur bone breaks directly next to the hip joint.
As a rule, this injury must be treated surgically, and rehabilitation afterwards takes a particularly long time. However, hip pain can have more than just traumatic causes. Many children are born with hip malpositions.
Nowadays, these can usually be treated in very early childhood with a special plaster technique. However, if a complete correction of the malposition is not possible, pain in the hip joint can occur as the children grow older. A pelvic obliquity, a difference in leg length, a lateral curvature of the spine (scoliosis), or an incorrect posture in the back can also cause hip joint pain.
Likewise, injuries in the area of the foot or knee joints often lead to a relieving posture, which becomes noticeable after a longer period of time through hip pain. But not only traumatic causes can cause hip pain. Many children are born with hip malpositions.
Nowadays, these can usually be treated with a special plaster technique in very early childhood. However, if a complete correction of the malposition is not possible, pain in the hip joint can occur as the children grow older.A pelvic obliquity, a difference in leg length, a lateral curvature of the spine (scoliosis), or an incorrect posture in the back can also cause hip joint problems. Likewise, injuries in the area of the foot or knee joints often lead to a relieving posture, which becomes noticeable after a longer period of time through hip pain.