Authors
Tomasz Poboży, Kacper Janowski, Paweł Domański, Klaudia Michalak, Kamil Poboży, Julia Domańska-Poboża, Wojciech Konarski, Iga Chuść, Maciej Kielar
Published in
Mayo Clinic proceedings. Innovations, quality & outcomes. Volume 10. Issue 4. Pages 100734. Epub Jun 23, 2026.
Abstract
To address the limited recognition of structural causes of lower-limb pain and the lack of real-world data on entheseal pathology, we evaluated ultrasound-detected entheseal and tendinous abnormalities in an unselected outpatient population, highlighting the underuse of musculoskeletal ultrasound (MSK US) in early diagnostic assessment despite the frequent misclassification of these conditions as nonspecific soft-tissue or degenerative disorders.
We conducted a retrospective analysis of 667 consecutive adults undergoing standardized MSK US for lower-limb pain in a general ambulatory orthopedic clinic. Fourteen predefined entheseal and tendinous sites across the hip, knee, and ankle-foot regions were evaluated using Outcome Measures in Rheumatology criteria. Prevalence, anatomical distribution, bilaterality, and clinical predictors were assessed using descriptive statistics and multivariable logistic regression.
Ultrasound-confirmed enthesopathy or tendinopathy was present in 152 of 667 patients (22.8%). Lesions most frequently involved the gluteus medius tendon and plantar fascia (5.5% each, n=37), followed by the semimembranosus (2.8%, n=19), patellar (2.6%, n=17), and Achilles tendons (4.2%, n=28). Abnormalities were predominantly unilateral (<10% bilateral). Increasing age was the only independent predictor of entheseal pathology (adjusted OR 1.26 per 10-year increase; 95% CI, 1.08-1.47). Sex, body mass index, diabetes, and rheumatologic disease were not relatively associated with pathology.
Entheseal and tendinous abnormalities are common among symptomatic adults in everyday outpatient practice. Systematic integration of MSK US as a first-line assessment tool could improve diagnostic precision and enable targeted management strategies. These findings provide population-relevant evidence to inform musculoskeletal care pathways and health system decision-making.
PMID:
42383140
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 01 Jul 2026.
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