Hip Limitation Claimed Secondary to Back or Neck Strain

Hip Limitation (VA diagnostic code 5252) is sometimes claimed as secondary to service-connected Back or Neck Strain (code 5237) under 38 CFR 3.310. This page reports what published Board of Veterans' Appeals decisions on that pairing show. It is an encyclopedic reference, not a forecast.

Last updated: July 2026 · Educational use only. This page catalogs how published Board decisions handled this claim pairing. It is not legal advice, not a recommendation about your claim, and it does not predict an outcome. Verify current rules at VA.gov or eCFR.

The Numbers, from 1.9 Million Appeals

In the Board's published decisions, hip limitation (DC 5252) claimed as secondary to back or neck strain (DC 5237) is a real, mid-sized claim pool that is an uphill claim once it reaches a merits decision.

9%
Granted, of all 752 issues. Among decided issues only (granted or denied), 17% were granted.
752
published Board issues arguing hip limitation secondary to back or neck strain
41%
of all issues were remanded, sent back for more development

How those 752 issues came out

Descriptive Board data. Correlation is not predictive. This shows how similar filings were decided in the published record, not the odds for any individual claim.
Granted: 69 Remanded: 312 Denied: 348 Other: 23

Counts from RateMyVSO's index of published BVA decisions, as of July 2026. "Granted 17%" counts only issues decided up-or-down: granted ÷ (granted + denied). A remand is not a loss; it means the Board needed more evidence before deciding. Secondary service connection rule: 38 CFR § 3.310.

Quick Checklist Before You File

  • Service connection already in place for Back or Neck Strain, and a current medical diagnosis of hip limitation.
  • Diagnostic testing, imaging, or clinical records documenting the hip limitation, whatever your provider used to diagnose and track it.
  • A nexus opinion, whenever possible from a doctor familiar with hip limitation, stating it is at least as likely as not caused or aggravated by the back or neck strain, and naming the mechanism rather than just the conclusion.
  • Lay statements: spouse, family, friends, or battle buddies describing what they've witnessed or noticed.
  • Your STRs and any VA opinions already in the file on either condition. If a VA opinion already went against you, your submitted opinion or statement should address its specific reasoning.

For the mechanics of filing itself, see the Standard Claim Guide and the Fully Developed Claim Guide.

Why hip limitation is claimed secondary to back or neck strain

Documented mechanism
A chronic low back strain changes how a person walks and moves, called antalgic gait, where the body unconsciously shifts weight and tightens muscles around the injured area to avoid pain. Because the lumbar spine (lower back) sits directly above the hip joint and shares muscle attachments with it, especially the hip flexor muscles that let you lift your knee toward your chest, ongoing lower back pain and this protective muscle guarding can restrict how far the hip is able to bend over time. The lower back also houses nerve roots, mainly L2 through L4, that connect to the femoral nerve supplying the main hip flexor muscle (the iliopsoas); irritation of these nerve roots from a back strain or related disc problem can directly weaken or limit hip flexion, a pattern doctors sometimes call hip-spine syndrome. This pathway is documented for strains affecting the lower back specifically, though it works through several indirect steps rather than a single direct cause; a neck strain, which the same diagnostic code also covers, has no comparable route to hip motion. Whether this connection applies to any one veteran's claim depends on that veteran's own medical records linking their specific back condition to their hip limitation.
This rationale is generated from the data for this specific pairing, not hand-written per page. The grant and denial figures above come only from the decision data, never from the rationale text.

Whether that medical link exists in any one case is a medical question decided on that case's own evidence (the nexus).

What a secondary claim on this pairing needs

Under 38 CFR 3.310 a secondary claim turns on three elements:

  • A current diagnosis: a medical diagnosis of hip limitation (the secondary).
  • A service-connected primary: Back or Neck Strain, already service-connected (the primary). A 0% primary still counts.
  • A medical nexus: a medical opinion linking the hip limitation to the back or neck strain, showing the primary caused or aggravated it.

See the Secondary Claim guide for the caused-versus-aggravated split, and the Nexus Letter guide for what makes the medical opinion strong.

Do's and Don'ts

Do
  • Get service connection established for Back or Neck Strain and a current diagnosis of hip limitation documented before you file.
  • Get a nexus opinion that names the specific mechanism connecting the hip limitation to the back or neck strain and cites supporting literature, not just a conclusion.
  • Include diagnostic testing, imaging, or clinical records for the hip limitation.
  • Get a spouse, family, friend, or buddy statement describing what they've witnessed, lay evidence the Board credits directly.
  • If a VA opinion already exists in your file, have your own opinion rebut it point by point rather than simply asserting the opposite conclusion.
Don't
  • Don't accept "the study shows an association, not causation" as the final word, exact etiology and scientific consensus are not the legal standard (Alemany v. Brown, 9 Vet. App. 518 (1996); Wise v. Shinseki, 26 Vet. App. 517 (2014)).
  • Don't treat a VA examiner's "unable to determine without speculating" as evidence against you, an unexplained non-opinion is not evidence at all.
  • Don't let a service-to-diagnosis time gap sink your secondary claim, that gap matters for a direct claim, not this one.
  • Don't assume you need an expensive specialist, a treating provider's notes plus published literature have carried grants before.
  • Don't leave a negative opinion unchallenged if it never engaged your submitted literature or lay statements, the Board has downgraded exactly that kind of opinion to minimal weight.

The Claims Process, Step by Step

A secondary claim moves through the same pipeline as any other. Understanding who does what helps you know who to contact and what to expect.

  1. You file the claim, naming Back or Neck Strain as the service-connected primary and hip limitation as secondary. Directly with VA, through VA.gov, or with an accredited representative's help.
  2. VA assigns a Veteran Service Representative (VSR) to develop the claim: gather your service treatment records, VA and private medical records, and order a C&P exam if needed.
  3. The C&P exam is conducted, usually with the examiner asked to address the specific secondary theory (causation and aggravation both).
  4. The file goes to a Rating Veteran Service Representative (RVSR), the "rater," who weighs the medical evidence and decides service connection and, if granted, the rating percentage.
  5. VA issues the decision letter stating the outcome and the reasoning.
  6. If denied or under-rated, you choose an appeal lane, Supplemental Claim, Higher-Level Review, or a Board appeal, covered below.

Who's who: VSO vs. VSR vs. Rater vs. C&P Examiner

Your VSO

An accredited representative, agent, or attorney. Not a VA employee. Helps prepare and file, and can represent you on appeal. Has no authority to decide your claim.

VSR

VA staff who develops the claim: gathers records and schedules the exam. Does not decide the rating.

Rater (RVSR)

VA staff who reviews the complete file and makes the actual decision on service connection and percentage.

C&P Examiner

Conducts the exam and, where asked, gives a nexus opinion. Does not decide the claim, but the opinion's reasoning and legal framing carry real weight.

For the full walkthrough, see Inside Your Claim and Claim Stages.

DBQs and Your C&P Exam

A Disability Benefits Questionnaire (DBQ) is the standardized form the examiner completes for your condition. See the DBQ Guide for how these forms work and whether a private DBQ from your own doctor can be submitted instead of relying solely on a VA exam. For what to expect and how to prepare, see the C&P Exam Prep Guide, and be specific about how your hip limitation symptoms relate to your back or neck strain timeline, treatment, and any aggravation, that is the detail a nexus opinion relies on.

Reading Your Decision Letter, and What to Do If Denied

Your decision letter has a narrative "reasons and bases" section and a codesheet with the rating and effective date. See the Reading Your Decision Letter Guide or use the Letter Interpreter tool to decode your own letter. If denied, you have three main lanes:

  • Supplemental Claim: refile with new and relevant evidence, such as a nexus opinion that addresses the mechanism and the specific VA rationale you're rebutting. See Supplemental Claim Guide.
  • Higher-Level Review (HLR): a senior reviewer looks at the same evidence again, useful if the denial rested on a legal error. See HLR Guide.
  • Board Appeal: your case goes to a Veterans Law Judge, with a direct review, evidence, or hearing docket. See Board Appeal Guide.

Not sure which lane fits? See the Appeals decision guide for a side-by-side comparison.

After You Win: Maintaining Your Rating

Keep documentation of ongoing treatment, follow-up evaluations, and any updated diagnostic testing for your hip limitation on file, this protects you if VA schedules a future reexamination. See Protect Your Rating for when a rating becomes protected and Future Reexaminations for what triggers one. If your hip limitation worsens, see the Rating Increase Guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Back or Neck Strain have to be highly rated to support a hip limitation secondary claim?

No. 38 CFR 3.310 looks at whether the service-connected Back or Neck Strain caused or aggravated the hip limitation, not at how severe the Back or Neck Strain rating is. Even a 0% service-connected primary can anchor a secondary claim.

What do the percentages on this page mean?

They are the historical outcomes of 752 published Board decisions on this exact pairing: 9% granted, 46% denied, 41% remanded. They describe decided appeals already on record. They do not predict what would happen in any individual case.

RateMyVSO. Educational resource. Not affiliated with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. Not legal advice. All RateMyVSO tools are free. Find a VSO representative for personalized guidance.