@AndrewWindass and myself have just finished our 4th radiographer-physiotherapy interdisciplinary team meeting.
2 AHP teams having a chance to discuss cases (clinical examination & xrays findings) seen by FCPs and diagnosed by radiographers.
Every week is more interesting
@neilstewart101@AmieCoombs2@PhysioMACP I would say over-coverage and sclerosis bilat. with Cam on right. Also subchondral cysts on right femoral head and is there some signs of remodelling?
@TaylorAlanJ Yes but find in most cases it's redundant. All require d-dimer as per NICE guidelines and I would assume in most physio settings this isn't accessible so would require onward ref to DVT services /A&E.
@gsingh1902 "We've booked you in with in-house physio who can spend the first 15minutes of their consultation explaining why your nerves aren't squashed"
@dysplasia_hip Interesting xray. Looks very anteverted bilat. Right hip very internally rotated, left looks externally rotated. Interested to know what people's thought are on right sup. pubic rami.
@DrJN_SportsMed Thanks for the reply. First thoughts certainly wouldn't be to inject, but I'd also read about high risk with olecranon bursitis as well and wasn't sure of mechanisms behind this. Have also overheard people talk about managing this with acupuncture needles but we won't go there!!
@DrJN_SportsMed Thanks for the excellent thread. Would you mind explaining why there's a high risk of infection with injecting bursitis'? Or suggest any reading on the topic.