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    Groin Injury

    Groin Injury



    Several groups of muscles attach in the Reference groin Opens New Window Reference Click here to see an illustration. Opens New Window area.

    • The flexor muscles bend the leg at the hip.
    • The adductor muscles allow the legs to move toward each other.
    • The abductor muscles allow the legs to move away from each other.
    • The rotator muscles allow the toes to be rotated toward or away from each other while the leg is straight.
    • The lower abdominal wall muscles and the Reference inguinal canal Opens New Window support pelvic structures.

    Acute injury

    A forceful blow to the groin can cause damage to muscles, ligaments, blood vessels, or organs in the abdomen or genital area. A sharp object can penetrate and injure the groin or genital area.

    You can pull (Reference strain Opens New Window) or tear a groin muscle during exercise, such as running, skating, kicking in soccer, or playing basketball. You can strain a groin muscle during lifting, pushing, or pulling heavy objects. A fall can pull a groin muscle. A sudden pulling or tearing of a groin muscle may cause sudden pain. A snapping sound may be heard with hip or leg movement. Swelling and bruising can occur quickly. Sometimes swelling and bruising do not show up for a few days after the injury.

    Reference Inguinal hernias Opens New Window occur when a weak spot develops in the lower abdominal tissue. Often the cause of the hernia is not known, but may be caused by lifting, straining, coughing, obesity, pregnancy, constipation, or aging. A weakness or abnormality in the muscles from birth (congenital) may also increase your chance of having a hernia.

    Overuse injury

    Some groin injuries come from overuse when repeated minor injuries lead to strains or tears of the muscles. Overuse injuries occur when too much stress is placed on an area. This often happens when you overdo an activity or repeat the same activity day after day. Overuse may cause:

    Home treatment can relieve the pain, swelling, and bruising that can occur with a pulled groin muscle.

    Groin injury in children

    In rare cases, a young child may have a hairline fracture of the hip or an avulsion fracture where the hip and upper part of the thighbone are torn apart by force and groin pain is the main symptom. Displacement of the head of the thighbone (Reference slipped capital femoral epiphysis Opens New Window) can occur from an injury. Mild groin or knee pain in a child that does not improve after a few days of home treatment needs to be evaluated by a doctor. If your child's groin pain is severe, immediate evaluation is needed.

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