It is important to have a HIP Buddy. A HIP Buddy is someone who is there for you during and after your Hip Replacement….someone you can count on to be there for you.
Category Archives: Hip Replacement Diary
Hip Replacement – The Ultimate Remedy for Arthritic Inmates
When a human being starts growing, his body builds up a propensity to come up with diverse heath complications. These health problems gradually weaken the functions of the body parts. One such harmful disease is arthritis which is considered to one of the painful health complications arising in the human body. Arthritis results in pain in the joints and the aftereffects usher on the hip and knee joints. As a result, people find difficult to move their hips flexibly since they experience a kind of stiffness in the joints. To tackle with such health complications, the hip replacement surgery can be a good option. The two types of surgeries that arthritis patients usually opt for are posterior hip replacement and anterior hip replacement.
via Hip Replacement – The Ultimate Remedy for Arthritic Inmates – Health.
Tips For Home After Hip Replacement Surgery
It’s very important that you follow your surgeon’s instructions. Additionally, here are some suggestions that may make life a little easier at home. Please discuss these with your surgeon before you are discharged from the hospital:
Remember that you’ll probably tire more easily than usual. You may want to plan a rest period of 30 to 60 minutes midmorning and mid-afternoon.
It’s safer and easier to get in and out of chairs using both arms, and you should avoid low or overstuffed furniture. To increase your comfort, use a cushion or pillow to raise your body while seated. MORE….
Anterior Approach Hip Replacement Surgery | Minimally Invasive Anterior Hip Replacement
A recent trend in hip replacement surgery has been to perform the surgical procedure through smaller, less-invasive approaches. The idea of this trend is to perform the same procedure with less disruption to the surrounding muscles and soft-tissues. By performing surgery through smaller incisions, with less soft-tissue dissection, it is hoped that patients will have less pain and a faster recovery.
via Anterior Approach Hip Replacement Surgery | Minimally Invasive Anterior Hip Replacement.
HEALTH: The Thigh Bone’s Connected to the Hip Bone …
According to a report from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), the most common reason for joint replacement is pain and a decreased quality of life … often caused by osteoarthritis, which occurs when cartilage in your joints wears down over time.
Recent advances in surgical techniques, such as computer-assisted and minimally-invasive procedures, have allowed patients to recover quickly and experience reduced levels of pain. This may account for the increase in the number of joint replacements — the demand for total hip replacements has increased by an astounding 60 percent and for total knee replacements by 70 percent in a 10-year period. Doctors performed 543,000 total knee replacements and 230,000 total hip replacements in 2007 (CDC).
Hip Replacement Surgery, Implants, Options, Information | BoneSmart
Hip replacement surgery is performed over 300,000 times each year in the U.S. to repair severe hip damage. In a hip replacement, the surgeon removes degenerate cartilage and bone from the hip joint and replaces them with prosthetics. This surgery is used to accomplish long-term pain relief and increased mobility.
via Hip Replacement Surgery, Implants, Options, Information | BoneSmart | BoneSmart.
Faulty Hip Implants, One Woman’s Story
Advancements in hip replacement ease the way for patients
Hip-replacement surgery, in general, involves replacing the cartilage with an artificial liner and replacing the top of the thigh bone. The new top has a stem, which is anchored into the thigh bone. It takes time for the bone to adhere to the new part.
For orthopedic surgeons, accessing the joint is like charting a course to a snowy peak – there are various routes, all carrying risks and rewards. Part of the challenge is navigating the formidable terrain of muscles and soft tissue, including the thick hip joint capsule, with as little disruption as possible.
One widely used, time-tested procedure, called the “posterior approach” because of the point of entry, compels a couple of months of limits on movement postoperatively, while the muscles and soft tissue heal. Newer surgeries, broadly referred to as “minimally invasive,” have reduced or eliminated those restrictions, meaning less chance of complications, less time in the hospital and faster healing. According to Drinker, all surgeries, even the posterior one, are less invasive than in the past, and have the same end result – a sturdy hip free from arthritis pain, that can last for more than 20 years. For those who have hip replacement, “it is life-changing,” Drinker said.
Drinker works at Hampshire Orthopedics & Sports Medicine Inc., in Hatfield. He also is medical director of Cooley Dickinson Hospital’s joint replacement center. Drinker and Dr. Robert Krushell of New England Orthopedic Surgeons in Springfield use versions of the posterior approach. Krushell calls his a “mini-posterior that creates relatively little disruption of tissues around the hip. It doesn’t compromise muscle strength.”
Read more and hear other hipster’s stories….
My name is Jodi and I’m powerless…
On October 31, 2010, it’s my right hip’s one year anniversary. That hip (anterior) is doing well. My left hip (posterior) is a reminder that I am doing too much …moving too fast <ouch> , not taking enough self-care <ughh>, and forgetting I am seemingly always in recovery of some kind <ah>….it’s my thermometer of sorts . My hips know before I even have a clue….
I admit it, do over-do it, I’ll admit it. I’m a type-A, a bionic type-A now! The truth is I find I can’t sit for super long periods of time without having to get up and move about. And sometimes I have to pause a beat when I get up before taking a step. It’s just “what is”. I make sure I swim (the best exercise for joints) and I walk and ride the bike everyday. It took a while to get that schedule down, but I feel so much better. I listen to empowering tapes when I’m on the stationary bike…that really helps! It’s a great balance for sitting at the computer. I feel proud of what I have accomplished, I wear my scars as a badge of honor. I choose to! And, it is a matter of choice…
See, I feel as if going through this experience (twice), and at a young age has made me stronger (facing many fears – some kicking and screaming and crying, of course), and also made me want to help others who are facing a hip replacement or are recovering and looking for support. I believe we are a CLUB, and we need to support each other.
That’s also why I created a yahoo email group AND Hip Happy Hours!
Sign up for our Email Chat group now! 🙂
So – hello there fellow HIPSTERS and welcome to The Hipster Club! We’ve been initiated, we’re bionic…and we set off ALARMS (at the airport)!!!!
XOXO
Jodi



