How to judge sacroiliac joint dislocation?

Update Date: Source: Network

summary

Sacroiliac joint dislocation is a common disease in society. The main symptom of sacroiliac joint dislocation during the onset period is sacroiliac pain. The most obvious symptom of sacroiliac joint dislocation is sacroiliac pain during the onset period.

How to judge sacroiliac joint dislocation?

1. What are the obvious symptoms of sacroiliac arthritis? The most important and obvious symptom of sacroiliac arthritis is pain, which is also the main cause of body dysfunction. Sacroiliac arthritis is characterized by occult attack, accompanied by continuous dull pain. The pain time is obvious after human activity, and the pain can be relieved after a short rest.

2. Following the aggravation of the disease, the movement of sacroiliac joint is severely restricted because of pain, and pain will also occur at rest. Because of the muscle injury of sacroiliac joint, it can not play a protective role on the joint when the patient is sleeping, which can not limit the pain as when the patient is awake, so it is easy for the patient to wake up because of pain during sleep.

3. After waking up the next day, the patient will feel stiff and conglutinated at the lesion after getting up. The occurrence of stiffness is to tell the patient of synovitis. Different from rheumatoid arthritis, the time is relatively short, in most cases it will not exceed half an hour. The feeling of adhesion is that the joints that stick together are still for a period of time, making the ready joints stiff, just like adhesion, and feeling relieved after slight activities.

matters needing attention

In addition to the above symptoms, there are also some symptoms of joint spasm, joint instability, pain at rest is still more serious after weight-bearing. In view of the poor fit of the joint surface, muscle spasm contraction and joint capsule contraction plus bone spur cause a series of reactions, resulting in mechanical atresia and dysfunction. It causes great harm to the patients themselves, they can't study and work normally, and they feel uncomfortable and their families are worried.