The Borneo Post

Six doctors couldn’t diagnose her pain

-

AS SHE rose from the dinner table one night in February 2016, Annie Karp winced as she felt a penetratin­g ache deep in her hips. Unable to straighten up for a minute or two, she took small steps towards the medicine chest in her parents’ Florida home in search of an over-the- counter painkiller. Karp assumed she had pulled several muscles during an overzealou­s workout earlier in the day.

For the next 11 months, the ache never went away, no matter what Karp tried. Sitting was especially painful, and she began dreading the multiple daily car trips required to shuttle her two children to their activities.

Karp consulted six doctors, none of whom could find an explanatio­n for the constant pain, which sometimes migrated to her pelvis.

“After a while, I just stopped talking about it,” recalled the 41year- old self- employed human resources consultant, who lives in Clarksburg, Maryland. “No one wants a whiner or a complainer.” The pain was wearing and worrying, but never unbearable. Karp decided to stop bouncing from specialist to specialist and focus instead on learning to live with it.

But when the seventh doctor she had seen in eight months told her what he’d found, Karp was elated, even though his solution was an arduous treatment.

“I was just so happy to have an answer,” she said.

Karp has always been athletic. She began ballet lessons at age three, was on the dance team in high school where she routinely performed splits, taught aerobics in college and even met her husband at a gym. She continued to love running and dancing, although she stopped ballet training at 15. Karp said her hip joint s we r e unusually flexible but had never caused her pain, even though they would briefly lock periodical­ly.

A few weeks after the Florida episode, Karp saw a Maryland orthopaedi­st who specialise­s in hip problems. She told him that her mother had had both hips replaced in her 60s. The doctor did not order an X-ray, but he did watch her walk, then pronounced her hips to be “perfectly normal.” He suggested she see a spine specialist.

The spine specialist, after conducting a brief exam, found nothing.

In April, after the pain radiated from her hip bones to her pelvis and she experience­d spotting between periods, Karp saw her gynaecolog­ist. An MRI scan of her abdomen and pelvis revealed a benign ruptured ovarian cyst. The gynaecolog­ist told her that the pain should dissipate soon.

When it didn’t, Karp began the first of 15 visits to a chiropract­or. He performed adjustment­s to realign her spine, which didn’t help.

In May, she consulted her internist. He ordered a raft of blood tests, all of which were normal except for t he level of

If kids mix up their sports a little bit, it might help prevent such injuries. Early subspecial­isation (in a sport) has not been great for our kids. Andrew Wolff, specialist in arthroscop­ic surgery

cortisol, a stress hormone, which was slightly elevated. The internist didn’t think it was significan­t and told Karp her hips looked normal. He suspected her pain might be gynaecolog­ic.

“At that point, we were sort of grasping at straws,” Karp recalled. She tried an acupunctur­e-like technique called dry needling. Sometimes performed by a physical therapist or naturopath­ic physician, the treatment involves inserting small needles into muscles to relieve pain. That failed, too.

By August, Karp decided she was done searching for an explanatio­n. “I had had extensive bloodwork and lots of tests” and was reassured that nothing serious was wrong, she said.

But in October, her mother, visiting from Florida, noticed Karp grimacing as she got up from the sofa. “She couldn’t believe I was still in pain,” Karp said. At her mother’s urging, she saw a third orthopaedi­st. He gave her topical anti-inflammato­ry cream and suggested cortisone shots might help.

On the day her first shot was scheduled, Karp was unable to obtain it because of a paperwork glitch. The receptioni­st suggested that Karp see an in-house physical therapist instead. The therapist asked Karp a question: Are you a dancer?

When Karp replied that she had studied ballet for years and still loved dancing, she said the therapist’s response was unequivoca­l: “I know exactly what’s wrong with you - and our doctors can’t help you.”

“She used a lot of terms I didn’t understand at the time,” Karp recalled. She told Karp she was probably suffering from a form of hip impingemen­t - the failure of the ball-and-socket hip joint to move smoothly.

Impingemen­t occurs in adolescenc­e in part from repeated stress common in ballet. The head of the femur becomes abnormally shaped and no longer fits seamlessly in the acetabulum, or socket, putting the hip at risk of future injury.

The physical therapist advised Karp to see yet another orthopaedi­st: Andrew Wolff, who specialise­s in arthroscop­ic hip surgery, in which miniature instrument­s reach damaged areas through small incisions. It is more often performed on shoulders and knees. Relatively few surgeons specialise in hips, a technicall­y demanding procedure.

“I was cautiously optimistic,” Karp recalled. At her initial appointmen­t in early December, Wolff did something none of the other orthopaedi­sts had done: He ordered an X-ray of Karp’s hips.

“The X-ray really did show the whole picture,” recalled Wolff, adding that he was puzzled at the failure of other doctors to order something so basic. “Hers was not subtle.”

The physical therapist’s assessment turned out to be correct. The X-ray clearly showed that Karp had a disorder called cam-type femoroacet­abular impingemen­t. “It was as though my bones were a square peg trying to fit into a round hole,” she said.

A subsequent MRI scan showed that the impingemen­t had shredded the labrum, the band of protective cartilage on the outside of the hip that helps cushion and stabilise the hip socket. Labral tears in dancers, as well as in people who play hockey, football, soccer and other sports, are common. “If kids mix up their sports a little bit, it might help” prevent such injuries, Wolff said. “Early subspecial­isation (in a sport) has not been great for our kids.” But not everyone with hip impingemen­t develops pain or other problems. “Some people are totally fine forever,” he noted.

The extreme positions required in ballet are particular­ly hard on hip joints. Wolff, an official physician for the Washington Ballet, said that some of his patients have undergone procedures to treat suspected gynaecolog­ic problems that were actually orthopaedi­c, because the pain can move to the pelvis or the back.

Because of the duration and impact of Karp’s symptoms and because her scans showed no sign of arthritis - which would require a hip replacemen­t - Wolff proposed reconstruc­ting both labra with tissue from a cadaver and smoothing the femoral head to ensure a proper fit.

Karp said that when Wolff told her what was wrong and that her problem was fixable.

After getting a second opinion, Karp scheduled surgery with Wolff, who performs the 2 1/2hour outpatient procedure about 300 times annually.

She underwent surgery on her left hip in January; her right hip was fixed in early March. “She’s done fantastic,” Wolff said. “The most common thing we see is people trying to push themselves too hard and too quickly” after surgery. Karp said that now that her pain is mostly gone, she must battle the temptation not to overdo it.

 ??  ?? The Karps live in Clarksburg, Maryland with their two kids Sasha and Jonah. (Below left) Annie Karp, 41, with her husband Brett spent nearly a year trying to find the source of her hip pain. — WP-Bloomberg photos courtesy of Annie Karp
The Karps live in Clarksburg, Maryland with their two kids Sasha and Jonah. (Below left) Annie Karp, 41, with her husband Brett spent nearly a year trying to find the source of her hip pain. — WP-Bloomberg photos courtesy of Annie Karp
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia