Summary: The outside of your hip hurts — someone called it "bursitis" or recommended hip stretches. Here's the problem: those stretches physically squeeze the painful tendons against the bone, which is exactly what's causing the pain. The real fix is teaching your hip how to carry load properly agai
Think of the tendon like a garden hose jammed against a fence post every time someone leans on it. Each time you cross your legs, hang your weight on one hip, or sleep on that side, the IT band presses your hip tendons against the bony knob underneath — not pulling them apart, but crushing them. The repair crew can't fix the hose if someone keeps jamming it every few hours.
Physio Engine · Hip
Gluteal Tendinopathy — Compressive Load Model
The Plain English Version
Your hip pain comes from being squeezed, not worn — and the stretches most people do make it worse.
Think of the tendon like a garden hose jammed against a fence post every time someone leans on it. Each time you cross your legs, hang your weight on one hip, or sleep on that side, the IT band presses your hip tendons against the bony knob underneath — not pulling them apart, but crushing them. The repair crew can't fix the hose if someone keeps jamming it every few hours.
Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling
What's Actually Going On
The gluteus medius and gluteus minimus — your primary hip stabilizers — attach as flat tendons over the bony prominence on the outside of your hip called the greater trochanter. The IT band (a thick band of tissue running down the outside of your thigh) overlies these tendons like a lid over a pipe.
Compression Cascade
The historic label "trochanteric bursitis" is now considered clinically obsolete. Modern imaging consistently shows the primary pathology is degenerative tendinopathy — there is no meaningful inflammatory cell infiltrate in established cases. The bursa only becomes secondarily irritated. This distinction matters enormously for treatment: anti-inflammatory approaches (ice, NSAIDs, steroids) target a process that isn't the primary driver.
Estrogen is a critical regulator of tendon collagen production. After menopause, estrogen decline reduces procollagen synthesis, making the tendon matrix stiffer and less capable of self-repair. Combined with female pelvic morphology (wider pelvis creating a more acute compressive angle), this produces a 3:1–4:1 female:male ratio and a prevalence spike reaching 23.5% in women aged 50–79.
After age 60, muscular power declines 2–5× faster than muscle mass. Declining abductor strength means the tendons absorb greater stress per contraction — even normal daily activities overload an already compromised system. This makes progressive loading essential, not optional, for adults in this age group.
How to Identify It
| Test | What It Catches | Stats | Clinical Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| 30-Sec Single-Leg Stance | Compressive load provocation — the gold standard for GTPS | Sn: 38–94% | Sp: 99–100% | +LR: 87.75 | Positive = lateral hip pain reproduced at trochanter. Highest-specificity GTPS test available. |
| Active/Resisted Hip Abduction | Gluteus medius tendon loading | Sn: 59–71% | Sp: 84–90% | +LR: 6.09 | Side-lying; resistance applied. Positive = lateral hip pain reproduced. |
| Trochanter Palpation | Sensitivity screening tool | Sn: 80–84% | Sp: 47–66% | Good screening (negative = useful rule-out), poor specificity. Not diagnostic alone. |
| FABER Test | Hip OA and labral differential | Sn: 82.9% | Sp: 90% | Groin pain = hip OA; lateral hip pain = supports GTPS. Useful differential tool. |
| FADER-R | Compressive load on GT tendons | Sn: 44–48% | Sp: 86–93.3% | Lower sensitivity; useful when positive to confirm compressive mechanism. |
| Trendelenburg Sign | Gluteus medius weakness | Sn: 35% | Sp: 99% | Very low sensitivity — only useful when present (confirms significant weakness). |
The single most important clinical question: is the pain groin-dominant or lateral hip?
Red Flags
The key distinguisher between benign GTPS and a serious hip pathology: positional night pain (GTPS — relieved by pillow support) vs non-positional night pain at rest (stress fracture, AVN, malignancy — does not improve with position change).
The Debate
Four significant shifts in how GTPS is managed — each with clinical implications.
Real World vs Lab
What Works
The cornerstone of all GTPS treatment. Delivered Day 1. No adduction past neutral — ever. Stop leg-crossing, hip-hanging posture, sleeping on the affected side without pillow support. Stop all ITB stretches and piriformis stretches immediately.
Supine or standing hip abduction isometric holds. 5 reps × 45–60 seconds. 40–70% maximum effort (inner range, no adduction). 1–2 min rest between reps. Daily (2–3× per day in acute phase). Immediate analgesic effect — loads tendon without compression.
3–5 sets × 10 reps. Slow tempo (3-0-3). Bodyweight progressing to light resistance. Exercises: offset bridging, double-leg squat progression, standing hip abduction. Pain <5/10 acceptable; no next-day flare permitted.
Late phase. 4 sets progressing 15RM → 6RM over 12 weeks. 3-0-3 or 4-0-4 tempo. 70–85% 1RM. 3×/week. Key exercises: standing cable hip abduction, lateral step-up, single-leg squat, lateral lunge. Superior tendon remodelling vs eccentric alone.
For patients with metabolic syndrome, type 2 diabetes, or those who can't tolerate standard loads. AGE collagen cross-linking makes standard HSR high-risk (higher pain, lower satisfaction). BFRT provides equivalent stimulus at 20–40% 1RM.
Protocol: 4 sets: 30-15-15-15 reps. 20–40% 1RM. 30–60 sec rest. Must reach 0–2 reps in reserve — failure proximity is mandatory at low load. 2–3×/week. 70–80% limb occlusion pressure.
Leukocyte-rich PRP superior to CSI at 12 and 24 weeks (ISHA 2022). Best used after failed 3–6 months conservative management. Single injection, ultrasound-guided. Rest 48–72h post-injection (do not disrupt the healing cascade). Resume loading thereafter. Improvement at 6–12 weeks post-injection.
15g hydrolysed collagen or gelatin + 50mg Vitamin C, taken 60 minutes before the primary exercise session. Doubles procollagen I synthesis markers. Vitamin C is an obligate cofactor — non-optional. Additive benefit; combine with exercise for synergistic effect. Particularly relevant for adults 50+.
Anabolic resistance requires 40g high-quality protein per meal (vs 20–25g in younger adults) for adequate muscle protein synthesis. Non-optional for this population — the exercise stimulus will not produce the required adaptation without it. 3–4 meals per day. Whey, fish, lean meat, eggs.
MHT may improve GTPS symptoms in combination with exercise in women with BMI <25 (ISHA 2022 conditional). Not a standalone therapy. Refer to GP/gynaecology. Preferred formulation: transdermal estradiol + oral micronized progesterone (lowest VTE and breast cancer risk profile).
One injection only, strictly as an analgesic bridge in highly irritable cases to allow exercise initiation. Not a treatment. LEAP Trial: inferior to exercise at 52 weeks. CSI weakens collagen structure — repeat injections are documented to increase rupture risk. Tell the patient that exercise must begin within 2–4 weeks or the benefit is wasted.
Exercise Prescription
Progressive loading protocol. Pain <5/10 during exercise with no next-day flare is the guiding rule throughout.
Stand beside a wall. Raise sore leg sideways, press lightly against wall as if pushing outward. Hold without movement. Keep pelvis level.
Lie on good side, sore leg on top. Slowly raise to 30–40°, hold 2 seconds. Lower slowly over 3 seconds. Do not allow leg to drop below the other leg.
Lie on back, knees bent. Place 80% weight through sore leg. Push heel into floor, lift hips. Hold 2 seconds at top. Lower slowly over 3 seconds.
Stand beside a step (15–20cm). Step up on sore leg. Keep pelvis level — don't let opposite side drop. Controlled 3-second descent.
Minimum 40g high-quality protein per meal, 3–4 meals per day (fish, lean meat, eggs, or whey). Additionally: 15g collagen powder + 50mg Vitamin C in a small glass of orange juice, 60 minutes before each exercise session. This doubles tendon repair signals in the body. Neither is optional for this age group.
Return to Training
All boxes must be clear before returning to sport or high-load training.
Regression plan for flare-up: 24–48h reduction in training load. Return to isometric phase. Reassess compressive load habits before re-escalating — the cause is almost always uncontrolled daily adduction, not training volume.
The Nuance
The overwhelming majority of GTPS presentations do not require surgery. Bursectomy and tendon repair are reserved for confirmed full-thickness gluteal tendon tears following a minimum of 6 months of rigorous, compliant conservative care — and outcomes are comparable to conservative management in carefully selected cases.
The primary reason patients fail conservative management is not tendinopathy severity. It is uncontrolled compressive daily load — sitting cross-legged, sleeping without pillow support, standing with weight shifted — combined with inadequate progressive loading. Surgery should not be considered unless a structured 6-month conservative programme with documented load compliance has genuinely been tried and failed.
What would change this: a well-powered RCT showing bursectomy outperforms progressive exercise and load management for tendinopathy without confirmed structural tear. Current evidence does not support this.
Sources
How strong is the evidence for the claims in this review? Higher = more confidence the claims are supported. This does not measure how large the effect is or how important it is compared with other levers.
Physio conditions reviewed against clinical evidence. What works, what doesn't, and what to do — from a practising physiotherapist.
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