Conditions We Treat · Hip Pain
Hip Pain Treatment in Logansport, IN
Figure out what’s driving it — and get a plan to walk, sit, and sleep comfortably again.
Hip pain can show up on the side of the hip, deep in the groin, or in the buttock — and it’s easy to confuse with low back pain or sciatica. We start with a movement-based hip and low back exam to identify your pattern, reduce irritation, and rebuild confidence with walking, stairs, sitting, and sleep. If your symptoms overlap with knee pain, foot & ankle pain, or pregnancy-related changes, we’ll connect the dots and outline the simplest next steps.
- Clear “what’s involved” explanation before any hands-on care
- Options matched to your comfort and movement findings
- Honest direction — including imaging/referrals when needed
Hip Pain Patterns: Side Hip vs. Groin vs. Buttock
Where it hurts — and what movements trigger it — helps us narrow down the most likely driver and the best next step.
Common patterns we see
- Side hip pain (often worse with lying on that side, stairs, long walks)
- Groin pain (often worse with deep bending, squatting, twisting)
- Buttock pain (can overlap with sciatica or lumbar referral)
- Pinching or catching with hip flexion (getting out of the car, tying shoes)
- Stiff first steps after sitting or in the morning
Many “hip pain” complaints are actually a hip + low back combo. We’ll test both so your plan targets the real driver — not just the painful spot.
How We Help Hip Pain
We aim to reduce irritation, restore motion, and rebuild strength so your hip tolerates real life again.
Movement Exam + Hip/Low Back Screen
We test hip range, gait, and movement triggers — plus a low back/nerve screen to rule in/out referral patterns.
Hands-On Care + Mobility (When Appropriate)
Targeted options to reduce protective tension and restore motion, matched to your comfort and exam findings.
Strength Progression + Return-to-Activity Plan
Hip and glute strength + control work, with clear progress markers so you know you’re improving.
Common goals we build toward
- Comfortable walking and stairs without sharp side-hip pain
- Better tolerance for sitting and getting out of the car
- Less night pain (see Hip pain at night: sleeping positions)
- Clarity on overlap with hip vs. sciatica vs. low back pain
- Return to training and sport (see Sports & Athletic Performance)
Hip Flare-Up Basics: What Usually Helps
Most people do better with a short-term “calm it down” plan — then a gradual return to walking and strengthening.
Simple guardrails
- Don’t push through sharp pain: discomfort is different than a sharp “catch.”
- Limit side-lying pressure: try the non-painful side with a pillow between knees.
- Short walking bouts: frequent, tolerable movement often beats long rest.
- Stairs strategy: take it slower and use a rail early on if needed.
- Use a “24-hour rule”: if you’re worse the next day, scale volume back.
The best plan depends on whether the driver is tendon, joint, muscle strain, or referral from the low back. We’ll tailor this to you.
Related Reading
Clear guides on hip pain patterns, sleep positions, and how to tell hip vs. back vs. nerve symptoms.
Related Services
Hip Pain FAQs
Clear answers — including “when to worry.”