First, get any unexplained chest pain medically checked. Then ask a clinician to do the hooking test — gently curling fingers under your lower rib edge and drawing it forward. If that reproduces your exact pain, often with a click, ask specifically about slipping rib syndrome.
An honest map of the treatment ladder. Be warned: nothing here has strong evidence — there is no clinical guideline, no systematic review, and no randomized trial for slipping rib syndrome anywhere. The badges below are graded honestly.
The sensible, low-risk first step for almost everyone. It manages symptoms while the rib settles — it is not proven to repair the loose attachment, so set expectations honestly. Reassurance and understanding the mechanical cause; cutting the specific movements that trigger the slip; simple pain relief, with topical anti-inflammatory gel a lower-risk option than tablets; and a course of physical therapy.
If conservative care is not settling it: dynamic ultrasound during a rib-push movement can confirm the slip, and a numbing injection around the affected nerve both confirms which rib is responsible and can relieve pain.
Slipping rib syndrome is the one chest-wall pain syndrome surgery can definitively fix. Removing the loose cartilage gives roughly 70% complete cure in case series, though recurrence after removal alone runs 17–25%. Adding rib stabilization plating cut recurrence to about 3% in one comparative study. Reserved for genuine, debilitating cases after a real conservative trial.
During a flare, cut the movements that reproduce the slip — heavily loaded trunk rotation and flexion, deep bench and overhead pressing, dips — and keep everything non-provocative at full load. Total rest is not the answer. Reintroduce trunk-loading work gradually. Tick these off before returning to full training:
Slipping rib syndrome is not dangerous. But lower-chest and upper-abdominal pain has serious causes that must be ruled out before settling on a rib explanation.
Refer to: A&E or urgent cardiac assessment for suspected cardiac pain. GP for an abdominal work-up. Thoracic surgery (experienced in slipping rib syndrome) for debilitating, refractory cases. Urgent medical referral for a suspected tumor or infection.
Get any unexplained chest pain medically checked. Then ask a clinician to do the hooking test — gently curling fingers under your lower rib edge and drawing it forward.
If that test reproduces your exact pain, often with a click, ask specifically about slipping rib syndrome. It is a clinical, hands-on diagnosis — no scan will find it for you.
Two steps. The check itself takes under a minute in clinic.
Endpoint-stratified. HIGH that this is a real mechanical condition and HIGH that the clinical task is simply to think of it — the long diagnostic delay is the single most consistent finding in the literature. LOW for any specific physiotherapy protocol, because conservative care is named as a mainstay everywhere and tested in a controlled trial nowhere.
What would change this: There is no clinical practice guideline, no systematic review, and no randomized trial in the entire topic. The evidence is retrospective surgical cohorts and case reports.
A prospective, blinded study of the hooking test and dynamic ultrasound against an independent reference standard — not the operating surgeon's own records — reporting real sensitivity and specificity. Right now the best diagnostic data is a single retrospective study of 46 patients.
A properly powered, blinded trial comparing a structured conservative programme against early surgical referral, plus a randomized comparison of the competing surgical techniques. None of these trials currently exists.
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