What is gluteal epicutaneous neuritis?

  Supragluteal neuritis is a relatively common clinical disease. The main clinical manifestations are stabbing, aching, tearing pain in the affected hip and pulling pain in the posterior part of the affected thigh, but most of them do not pass the knee and have limited bending and sitting activities.  Most of the patients with epiglottic neuritis have a history of lumbosacral sprain or a history of wind and cold. When the external wind, cold and dampness invade the lumbar and hip area or sudden lumbosacral sprain or local direct violent impact, the section of the superior gluteal cutaneous nerve under the iliac crest is injured, and local soft tissue injury causes congestion, edema and inflammation of the surrounding muscles and fascia and other structures, which then leads to adhesion and hypertrophy (the appearance of striated nodules), thus compressing the surrounding nutrient vessels and resulting in insufficient blood supply or directly compressing the nerve and producing pain. Supraspinatus neuritis is usually differentiated from sciatica, pear-shaped muscle syndrome, and other diseases.