Right now, adjust your chair so your hips are at or above knee height. If your hips sit below your knees, you're loading the torn cartilage every hour you sit. This single change — for every chair, car seat, and sofa — reduces pain faster than any exercise.
The labrum is like the rubber seal on a vacuum cleaner — it creates negative pressure to keep the ball locked in the socket. A tear doesn't mean the machine breaks; it means the seal leaks slightly. The real fix isn't patching the seal (the labrum can't truly repair itself) — it's making the motor so powerful that it doesn't depend on a perfect seal to hold everything in place. Build the hip muscles, reduce the joint's reliance on the labrum.
Body Region: Hip · Conservative vs Surgical
CONVICTION: MODERATEEliminating the mechanical inputs that continuously irritate the labrum. Non-negotiable for the first 8–12 weeks. This is not rest — it's intelligent load management.
Blood flow restriction training induces hypertrophy in the gluteals, hip abductors, and external rotators at 20–30% 1RM — without generating the compressive and shear forces of heavy loading. The critical advantage: builds the muscles that stabilize the femoral head while sparing the labrum from mechanical irritation.
Burning and muscular fatigue are expected — that's the mechanism. Sharp groin pinch = stop and deload.
Push leg straight back without leaning forward. Keep pelvis level throughout.
Anterior pelvic tilt prematurely closes the anterior acetabular space and loads the labrum with every step. Correcting pelvic motor control reduces labral stress throughout the day — not just during exercise.
Feel lower back working to stay still. No groin pain. Lower slowly.
Drive through heels. Squeeze glutes at top. No anterior pelvic tilt.
Begin after 6–8 weeks of BFR foundation. External rotator strengthening (piriformis, obturator internus, gemelli) improves femoral head centralization and reduces anterior impingement force. Eccentric loading at long muscle length adds fascicle-level adaptation.
Progress when LSI reaches 85% vs asymptomatic side.
Ultrasound-guided intra-articular corticosteroid injection for highly irritable presentations. NOT a standalone treatment — used to create a pain window for exercise participation. Single injection, not repeated.
No dedicated labral tear RCTs exist. Limited mechanistic rationale for structural regeneration in avascular tissue. Noted as viable adjunct in current consensus — not first-line.
Posterior hip joint distraction, mobilization with movement. Useful for capsular stiffness component. Neurophysiological pain modulation mechanism likely dominant over biomechanical correction.
Do This Now
Adjust every seat you use so your hips sit at or above knee level.
Low chairs, car seats, and sofas force the hip into sustained compression against the torn cartilage. This single change — before any exercise — is often the fastest pain reducer. Raise your office chair, add a firm cushion to your car seat, and avoid low couches until your symptoms are controlled.
The cartilage tear half the population has without knowing — and the muscles that fix it.
The labrum is like the rubber seal on a vacuum cleaner — it creates negative pressure that keeps the ball locked in the socket. A tear doesn't break the machine; it makes the seal leak slightly. Here's the key: the labrum can't repair itself (its inner two-thirds have almost no blood supply). But the machine doesn't have to be perfect. If you build the motor — the muscles around your hip — strong enough, the joint no longer depends on a flawless seal to stay stable. That's what conservative management is: making the muscles do what the labrum can't.
Adults with anterior groin pain (C-sign) who have not yet completed a structured, high-load 6-month conservative program. Recreational to competitive athletes. Over-50s with degenerative labral pathology alongside FAI morphology.
Severe acetabular dysplasia, advanced OA (bone-on-bone), avascular necrosis, true locking/giving way, or oncological red flags — these require professional assessment before any self-managed exercise.
~60% succeed without surgery
(UK FASHIoN trial, N=348, 12-month follow-up)
~79–85% return to sport
(Zhang 2021 meta-analysis, N=575, 3 RCTs)
No dedicated CPG exists for acetabular labral tears as of April 2026. The CASEM-ACMSE 2025 consensus statement provides the best current guidance. Most RCTs compare surgery to generic, underdosed physical therapy — not high-load BFR + HSR. When PT is properly dosed, the gap between surgery and conservative care almost certainly narrows. The published +6.8 iHOT-33 surgical advantage frequently falls below the minimal clinically important difference — meaning the average patient cannot feel the difference.
What would change this: A multi-center RCT (N>300) comparing arthroscopic labral repair vs high-load BFR + HSR physical therapy in adults with labral tears without significant FAI morphology (alpha angle <50°), with iHOT-33 scores and OA progression tracked at 2, 5, and 10 years, would definitively resolve the conservative-vs-surgical question.
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Join The Verdict — Free Weekly ProtocolsArthroscopy vs Personalised Hip Therapy (PHT) for FAIS + labral tear. +6.8 iHOT-33 surgical advantage at 12 months — frequently below MCID. ~60% conservative success.
RCT — HIGH quality76% consensus agreement: minimum 6-month conservative trial before surgical reinvestigation; arthroscopic repair preferred over open or debridement.
Consensus Statement — Expert panelMeta-analysis: arthroscopy statistically superior for iHOT + HOS-ADL; no significant difference in sport return rates between surgery and PT.
Systematic review / Meta-analysisConservative vs surgical RTS: 55% vs 79% (p=0.083, not significant). Conservative recovery: 27 days. Post-surgical recovery: 324 days.
Retrospective cohortLabral repair vs debridement: repair shows dramatically lower total hip arthroplasty conversion rate (up to 10× lower). Debridement causes progressive OA via fluid seal destruction.
Long-term comparative cohortBFR at 20–40% 1RM produces hypertrophy and strength gains comparable to high-load training via hypoxia-induced Type II fibre recruitment.
Meta-analysis — HIGH qualityHow 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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