RESUMO
INTRODUCTION AND IMPORTANCE: Quadriceps palsy is a sign of femoral nerve injury. Classically it is a compression of the nerve by a haematoma of the iliopsoas muscle in haemophiliacs and patients on anticoagulants. Could this haematoma form after a trauma in a healthy athlete? CASE PRESENTATION: We report a case of 16-year-old kickboxer with no previous history who had been complaining of the left groin for 3 weeks after being struck in the left iliac fossa. The examination revealed a complete palsy of the left quadriceps with anesthesia of the anterior aspect of the thigh. Femoral nerve involvement was suspected. MRI of the pelvis revealed a large hematoma of the left iliac muscle compressing the femoral nerve. Blood tests did not show any abnormalities. Surgical evacuation of the hematoma with neurolysis of the femoral nerve was performed. Six months postoperatively, the patient had fully recovered from their neurological deficit and was able to return to all his normal activities. CLINICAL DISCUSSION: The post-traumatic etiology of iliopsoas muscle hematoma compressing the femoral nerve in the absence of any hematological cause is rare. Few cases have been published (39 in 75 years). According to the literature, treatment is conservative if the paralysis is partial, but it must be surgical in case of complete paralysis. CONCLUSION: This rare pathology of the adolescent must be known to avoid any prejudicial diagnostic error for the often athletic patient. Whatever the diagnostic delay, a surgical procedure is necessary in case of complete paralysis of the femoral nerve.