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Hello Reen,

I just had a THR Sept. 1st and I was out of work for 3 1/2 weeks. My doctor

suggested that I take 6 - 8 weeks off and I wish I could have because it was

uncomfortable for me to do just about anything even though I have a desk job. I

started physical therapy 1 month after my surgery and I am still going 1 -2

times per week. Take as much time as you can because you will need it.

I also have a question for anyone that has had hip replacement surgery...Do

you remember how long it was until you were able to sleep on your side that was

operated on? At night I will turn on that side without even realizing it and

wake up with tremendous pain.

Thanks

Hip replacement

Hello,

I am new to the group and joined because I am scheduled to have hip

replacement surgery in a few weeks. Can anyone tell me how long their

rehabilitation process lasted? My employer is wondering how long I will be out

of

work and I am looking to give a ballpark answer.

I have ordered a book called " Your Complete Guide to Total Hip Replacement "

and hope that this will answer some questions I have.

Thanks and I enjoy reading the posts on this site.

Reen

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Hi Donna,

I am 62 and retired from a desk job. My job now is part time but it is

physical. I walk all day and do a lot of reaching and bending but the plus

side is that we use a shopping carriage that we push so it is really like

using a walker.

I am going to ask the doctor to put eight weeks recovery on the note for my

employer after reading all the posts from everyone about recovery from

joint replacements. If I go back sooner, then great. If not, at least the

pressure of rushing back to work is not there.

I admire your intention to travel at Christmas. You sounded determined to

regain your life and also test out your new knee. You know, Easter is

coming up for another go at it.

Thank you for your suggestions. The more people tell me not to rush back

to work, the more it is sinking in.

Reen

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Hi Alice,

It is finally sinking in that this is major surgery and to allow proper

time to recover. I need a knee replacement down the road after this hip

surgery and chose to do the hip first because everyone tells me that it is so

much easier than the knee. So my head was thinking, okay, get this easier

one over with. I now consider this to be just as major as the knee and not

expect to be up and about in 4 weeks.

I was a runner for about 15 years in my younger days. I ran 2to 4 miles

every day and about 12 miles once a week with one day off for rest. I used

this sport to help give up smoking. I sometimes wonder if that did not

help deteriorate the knee and hip. It did help me give up smoking so I have

no regrets either way.

Thanks for the imput. Every post is helping me get me mentally prepared for

this surgery.

Reen

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" I need a knee replacement down the road after this hip

surgery and chose to do the hip first because everyone tells me that it is so

much easier than the knee. "

Some docs, like mine, prefer getting the hip out of the way because so much of

the pain one feels in the leg is related more to the hip. I had tons of pain

throughout my entire legs, to say nothing of muscle spasms. I'm SO glad it's

gone! Although I also have OA in my knees, so who knows when I may have to

consider knee replacement. Not looking forward to that or any more major

surgery. After 2 in 6 months, my fatigue level is very high, despite good

sleep. I think I could eat an entire cow, I crave protein so much--sorry to

vegetarians.

Ya never know!

Alice

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  • 7 months later...

Well, thanks, , I think there¡¯s a lot to be encouraged about! Maybe

it¡¯s a matter of perspective.

I have recently come back into contact with my high school boyfriend, who

was an exchange student from India. When our senior year in high school

(1963) was over, he went back to India, I went to Stanford, we forgot the

whole thing.

Of course we didn¡¯t really. Come on. I loved him beyond my years, and I

never forgot. Never. Even now he signs his emails ¡°remembering you

always,¡± and that¡¯s the truth there.

So now we¡¯re back in contact, as of March 2010, almost 47 years later,

courtesy of Facebook. (He hunted me down.) We¡¯re both grandparents now.

In India, even if you¡¯re relatively well off, as my friend is, if your hip

or your knee goes out, you get a cane, every step hurts, end of story.

Everyone expects it. It¡¯s a normal part of aging.

This is the story of mankind from time immeasurable. My friend and his

entire family are astonished, and shocked, by my story, and my example, as

though I had found a way to reverse the whole aging process altogether. (He

was here in the States, visiting a grown son, and was amazed by how easily I

move around. ¡°I saw you running!¡± he said, shocked (I ran against doctors

orders of course but oh well.)) His daughter-in-law and I (and her parents,

and her baby) walked across the Golden Gate Bridge yesterday, and we were

almost to the parking lot again before this young woman thought to ask

whether I was OK with my knee. Young as she is, she¡¯s surprised too. To

tell you the truth I hadn¡¯t given it a thought!)

We have a miracle of modern medicine at our disposal here. They can cut the

bone here and here (my friend winces), pull out the old joint, stick in a

contraption of metal and plastic and tra la! You¡¯re as good as new, maybe

even better.

There are so many things that can go wrong with your body that no one can

fix. The list goes on and on. Knees? Hips? They can fix it, it¡¯s a CURE,

honest! so fix it!

F

TKR 1/15/09

on 8/22/10 5:21 PM, kjc at k_j_cotten@... wrote:

>

>

>

>

>

> , I love to read your posts. You're an encourager.

>

> in TX

>

>

>

>> >

>

>> >

>

>> >

>

>> >

>

>> >

>

>> > Hello fellow hipsters. Hope everyone is doing reasonably well.

>

>> > I recently switched over to this group from the hip resurfacing group as I

>> am

>

>> > not a good candidate for that procedure. I would like to inquire if anyone

>

>> > knows of a surgeon in the Toronto area to perform a hip replacement using

>> the

>

>> > anterior approach. I have already consulted with 4 surgeons. I was told

>> they

>

>> > would use ceramic on metal.

>

>> > Does anyone have a doctor that they can highly recommend. It is so hard >>

and

>

>> > scary to choose. Every surgery is a risk. I already had a (very successful

>> so

>

>> > far) shoulder replacement 3 years ago,(at age 52)and this last follow up

>

>> > appointment, I was told I will need the other shoulder shortly. I also have

>

>> > tears in my knee, opposite the hip that needs repairing, so I can't even

>

>> > imagine hobbling on crutches for about 6 weeks like they suggest. I lost

>> my

>

>> > fitness level these last few months, and although

>

>> > it is increasingly difficult I do some exercise/stretching, swimming and

>

>> > walking (better than sitting). I really want to be active again shortly

>> and I

>

>> > heard having the surgery using the anterior approach is a quicker recovery

>> and

>

>> > less restrictive. I would appreciate any suggestions and recommendations

>> if

>

>> > anyone knows of a fabulous doctor. There are so many out there, it is hard

>> to

>

>> > choose and one has to be lucky also. Thank you.............

>

>> > Kathy

>

>> >

>

>> >

>

>> >

>

>> >

>

>> >

>

>

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If your friend is still in India, Check out Apollo Hospital with Dr. Vijay Bose.

He is a top surgeon in hip resurfacing, Knee replacement, and total hip

replacement.

 

Alot of Americans go to Dr. Bose to have hip resurfaced. He is one of the best

in the world.

 

I had my hip resurfaced by Dr. Bose in June, 2010.

>

>> >

>

>> >

>

>> >

>

>> >

>

>> >

>

>> > Hello fellow hipsters. Hope everyone is doing reasonably well.

>

>> > I recently switched over to this group from the hip resurfacing group as I

>> am

>

>> > not a good candidate for that procedure. I would like to inquire if anyone

>

>> > knows of a surgeon in the Toronto area to perform a hip replacement using

>> the

>

>> > anterior approach. I have already consulted with 4 surgeons. I was told

>> they

>

>> > would use ceramic on metal.

>

>> > Does anyone have a doctor that they can highly recommend. It is so hard >>

and

>

>> > scary to choose. Every surgery is a risk. I already had a (very successful

>> so

>

>> > far) shoulder replacement 3 years ago,(at age 52)and this last follow up

>

>> > appointment, I was told I will need the other shoulder shortly. I also have

>

>> > tears in my knee, opposite the hip that needs repairing, so I can't even

>

>> > imagine hobbling on crutches for about 6 weeks like they suggest. I lost

>> my

>

>> > fitness level these last few months, and although

>

>> > it is increasingly difficult I do some exercise/stretching, swimming and

>

>> > walking (better than sitting). I really want to be active again shortly

>> and I

>

>> > heard having the surgery using the anterior approach is a quicker recovery

>> and

>

>> > less restrictive. I would appreciate any suggestions and recommendations

>> if

>

>> > anyone knows of a fabulous doctor. There are so many out there, it is hard

>> to

>

>> > choose and one has to be lucky also. Thank you.............

>

>> > Kathy

>

>> >

>

>> >

>

>> >

>

>> >

>

>> >

>

>

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  • 2 weeks later...

I had my hip replacement in January and did have intermittent pain for

about 6 months. Sometimes, it felt like the scar hurt, other times the pain

was in the inner thigh area and at other times, even the back of the hip.

The pains came and went. Is your pain constant?

Reen

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  • 1 month later...

Great advice, ......BARB in Florida

Re: Hip Replacement

I had a knee, not a hip, but I think the same principles would apply.

Of course you¹re tired and depressed!! Anyone would be. Being in that much

pain is not OK, and furthermore, unlike so many things that go wrong with

us, in this case medical science has a CURE, that is, a hip replacement.

I¹ve had many clients who have had hip replacements, and they all praise it

unstintingly. I¹m very happy now that walking doesn¹t hurt any more after I

had my knee replaced, and they say hips are easier than knees. Certainly

they¹ve been doing them longer. These operations are almost always rousing

successes. The ones that don¹t work, and the recalls, those are very rare,

actually.

My advice would be to find an orthopedic surgeon you trust ­ ask around, I

don¹t know where you are geographically ­ and trust his or her judgment on

this. Interview several doctors to find one you have confidence in. (I

talked to three. No, four, actually. ) That¹s what I did, and after that I

deliberately isolated myself from the details (because they freak me out).

I have no idea, for example, what brand of knee prosthetic I received. AND

I DON¹T WANT TO KNOW. I hired my surgeon, who knows all about this stuff,

to make that decision. I am an expert in my own area (tax law) and he

presumably is an expert in his. I¹m certainly not going to learn enough on

the internet or anywhere else to challenge his expertise, and frankly I

wouldn¹t want to.

Do something. Don¹t just sit there in pain.

F

TKR 1/15/09

on 10/31/10 8:44 PM, Goldie at starwatch1900@... wrote:

>

>

>

>

>

> I need a hip replacement but I am worried about getting on , I have been

> hearing all this about recalls, I just dont know what to do, I have pain

> every day I get tried alot and feel down alot. Thank you all

>

>

>

>

>

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Thank you for responding to my post, I sometimes feel alone in all this goings

on, anyway thanks again and have a Blessed day.

________________________________

From: Tinopener <tinopener@...>

Joint Replacement

Sent: Mon, November 1, 2010 7:22:11 AM

Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

 

Good luck Goldie - I was really worried about how I'd cope with a knee

replacement, but thought that if I didnt have it my mobility would just get

worse, not better, so I took the plunge. I'm glad I did. But although there

is currently a problem with some hip replacements, I'm sure that another

brand will be used in future - I would hope so, anyway!

Lin

I need a hip replacement but I am worried about getting on , I have been

hearing all this about recalls, I just dont know what to do, I have pain

every day I get tried alot and feel down alot. Thank you all

------------------------------------

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Thank you for responding to my post, it was very usefull information, I am glad

for this site I really need to hear from others that have these same problems.

________________________________

From: Rich <rluxt@...>

Joint Replacement

Sent: Mon, November 1, 2010 11:51:14 AM

Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

 

The recall was for the dePuy metal on metal 48 mm acetabular cup based knee.

That cup was also used in hip resurfacing and the mating surface led to

excessive metal ions being deposited in the blood stream and surrounding tissue

if not positioned properly. From my understanding about 12% of the implants

experienced tissue necrosis (dying of the adjacent tissue) in the first three

years and eventually led to the recall. J & J was reluctant to do it but finally

gave in.

My wife got a dePuy 36 mm Pinnacle MOM hip two years ago and is doing fine as

are many, even those with the recalled hips at least for now.

Finding the right surgeon with both skill, good bedside manner and non-defensive

post operative care (so they are attentive to any issues in a timely fashion) is

the key.

The probability of joint failure is very low as you can see even from the

recalled hip data so I would suggest that you do your proper due diligence in

selecting a surgeon and the implant and go for it.

The aid and support in this group is mostly anecdotal, that is, people

encouraging people and relating their own stories. You will probably have to go

to other resources to assess the surgeons (hard to do and the medical community

fights objective assessments) so talk to as many folks as you can, check the

State office for doctor registration for any punitive action, check State courts

for any listing of legal action (suits et al) if you can in your State, and talk

to more people, especially prior patients of the surgeon you are considering.

And, finally, DO whatever therapy that is ask of your religiously!

Rich L

Green Bay, WI

>

> I need a hip replacement but I am worried about getting on , I have been

> hearing all this about recalls, I just dont know what to do, I have pain

> every day I get tried alot and feel down alot. Thank you all

>

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I want to do something but I must wait till i am 65 then hopefully medicare will

pay more then the ins I have now, I must lay out $7,000 or more o my. I am 63

dont know if I can make it till then. Have a Blessed day

________________________________

From: Foley <sefoley@...>

Joint Replacement

Sent: Mon, November 1, 2010 10:02:42 AM

Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

 

I had a knee, not a hip, but I think the same principles would apply.

Of course you¹re tired and depressed!! Anyone would be. Being in that much

pain is not OK, and furthermore, unlike so many things that go wrong with

us, in this case medical science has a CURE, that is, a hip replacement.

I¹ve had many clients who have had hip replacements, and they all praise it

unstintingly. I¹m very happy now that walking doesn¹t hurt any more after I

had my knee replaced, and they say hips are easier than knees. Certainly

they¹ve been doing them longer. These operations are almost always rousing

successes. The ones that don¹t work, and the recalls, those are very rare,

actually.

My advice would be to find an orthopedic surgeon you trust ­ ask around, I

don¹t know where you are geographically ­ and trust his or her judgment on

this. Interview several doctors to find one you have confidence in. (I

talked to three. No, four, actually. ) That¹s what I did, and after that I

deliberately isolated myself from the details (because they freak me out).

I have no idea, for example, what brand of knee prosthetic I received. AND

I DON¹T WANT TO KNOW. I hired my surgeon, who knows all about this stuff,

to make that decision. I am an expert in my own area (tax law) and he

presumably is an expert in his. I¹m certainly not going to learn enough on

the internet or anywhere else to challenge his expertise, and frankly I

wouldn¹t want to.

Do something. Don¹t just sit there in pain.

F

TKR 1/15/09

on 10/31/10 8:44 PM, Goldie at starwatch1900@... wrote:

>

>

>

>

>

> I need a hip replacement but I am worried about getting on , I have been

> hearing all this about recalls, I just dont know what to do, I have pain

> every day I get tried alot and feel down alot. Thank you all

>

>

>

>

>

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goldie,

i have had the THR since last march and still suffering from limbing and pain.

my recommendation is not to do it unless you become in a bad need and no other

way to let you walk.

mustafa

________________________________

From: Tinopener <tinopener@...>

Joint Replacement

Sent: Mon, November 1, 2010 1:22:11 PM

Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

 

Good luck Goldie - I was really worried about how I'd cope with a knee

replacement, but thought that if I didnt have it my mobility would just get

worse, not better, so I took the plunge. I'm glad I did. But although there

is currently a problem with some hip replacements, I'm sure that another

brand will be used in future - I would hope so, anyway!

Lin

I need a hip replacement but I am worried about getting on , I have been

hearing all this about recalls, I just dont know what to do, I have pain

every day I get tried alot and feel down alot. Thank you all

------------------------------------

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Goldie-

I had two hip replacements (Right - 2003; Left - 2004) and after rehab have

been pain-free and almost unlimited in activities. At the 6-month follow-up

visit, my Orthopedist told me the only two activities forbidden were bungee

jumping and free-fall parachuting. Since neither were on my list of " things

to do " , that didn't matter.

I did find that I can't run as easily, fast, or as long as I used to, and

the same goes for bicycling. Other than that, I live a normal life, except

when it comes to traveling by air. The security people really haven't got a

clue. I've been strip-searched in London (Heathrow & Gatwick), Paris

( de Gaulle), Athens, New York (Kennedy), Rome (Leonardo da Vinci)

and Amsterdam (Schiphol) airports. None of these paid any attention to the

letter from the Sheba Medical Center that preformed the surgeries or the

international handicapped card I got from the National Insurance Institute.

Oddly enough, the two best places to travel from were Ben-Gurion (Israel,

where I live) and Brazil (Garulhos - Sao o and Salgado Filho - Porto

Alegre) the letter from the medical center was accepted by all three. At

Heathrow, even the surgical scars were " suspect " .

Be ready to be searched thoroughly if you travel by air. If you keep your

cool and take it in stride, the security personnel will respond in kind.

They only get really nasty when someone makes snide or sarcastic remarks to

them.

Check out more than one surgeon-all surgeons are NOT equal. Mine had more

than 4,000 hip replacements under his belt with a success rate of over 98%.

Not surprising, since he was the head of the department. Find one with

experience and a good success rate, make up your mind that you're not going

to be one of the failures, do your exercises and listen to any limitations

the surgeon gives (usually, they're temporary, like not bending the joint

past 90 degrees for the first 6 weeks).

If I hadn't had the surgeries, I would have been confined to a wheelchair

for the past five years. The hip replacements gave me back my life.

( " Double Hippie " )

RTHR - 2003; LTHR - 2004

_____

From: Joint Replacement

[mailto:Joint Replacement ] On Behalf Of mustafa Attili

Sent: Tuesday, November 02, 2010 9:13 AM

Joint Replacement

Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

goldie,

i have had the THR since last march and still suffering from limbing and

pain.

my recommendation is not to do it unless you become in a bad need and no

other

way to let you walk.

mustafa

________________________________

From: Tinopener <tinopener@...

<mailto:tinopener%40moggies.freeuk.com> >

Joint Replacement

<mailto:Joint Replacement%40>

Sent: Mon, November 1, 2010 1:22:11 PM

Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

Good luck Goldie - I was really worried about how I'd cope with a knee

replacement, but thought that if I didnt have it my mobility would just get

worse, not better, so I took the plunge. I'm glad I did. But although there

is currently a problem with some hip replacements, I'm sure that another

brand will be used in future - I would hope so, anyway!

Lin

I need a hip replacement but I am worried about getting on , I have been

hearing all this about recalls, I just dont know what to do, I have pain

every day I get tried alot and feel down alot. Thank you all

------------------------------------

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michael,

i am pleased to know about a very successful THR case.congratulations and my

best wishes for you to continue with a good health. regarding my case it seems

that i am unfortunate although the specialist is an expert, he used the lateral

approach instead of the anterior approach during which part of the medius

muscles were cut and stitched, and a small diameter ball(32mm,metal to

polythelene).however i would like to benifit from your experience in

strengthening the  thigh side muscles as the pt requested and any other

advices.

best regards

mustafa

 

________________________________

From: on <mdavison@...>

Joint Replacement

Sent: Tue, November 2, 2010 9:38:30 AM

Subject: RE: Hip Replacement

 

Goldie-

I had two hip replacements (Right - 2003; Left - 2004) and after rehab have

been pain-free and almost unlimited in activities. At the 6-month follow-up

visit, my Orthopedist told me the only two activities forbidden were bungee

jumping and free-fall parachuting. Since neither were on my list of " things

to do " , that didn't matter.

I did find that I can't run as easily, fast, or as long as I used to, and

the same goes for bicycling. Other than that, I live a normal life, except

when it comes to traveling by air. The security people really haven't got a

clue. I've been strip-searched in London (Heathrow & Gatwick), Paris

( de Gaulle), Athens, New York (Kennedy), Rome (Leonardo da Vinci)

and Amsterdam (Schiphol) airports. None of these paid any attention to the

letter from the Sheba Medical Center that preformed the surgeries or the

international handicapped card I got from the National Insurance Institute.

Oddly enough, the two best places to travel from were Ben-Gurion (Israel,

where I live) and Brazil (Garulhos - Sao o and Salgado Filho - Porto

Alegre) the letter from the medical center was accepted by all three. At

Heathrow, even the surgical scars were " suspect " .

Be ready to be searched thoroughly if you travel by air. If you keep your

cool and take it in stride, the security personnel will respond in kind.

They only get really nasty when someone makes snide or sarcastic remarks to

them.

Check out more than one surgeon-all surgeons are NOT equal. Mine had more

than 4,000 hip replacements under his belt with a success rate of over 98%.

Not surprising, since he was the head of the department. Find one with

experience and a good success rate, make up your mind that you're not going

to be one of the failures, do your exercises and listen to any limitations

the surgeon gives (usually, they're temporary, like not bending the joint

past 90 degrees for the first 6 weeks).

If I hadn't had the surgeries, I would have been confined to a wheelchair

for the past five years. The hip replacements gave me back my life.

( " Double Hippie " )

RTHR - 2003; LTHR - 2004

_____

From: Joint Replacement

[mailto:Joint Replacement ] On Behalf Of mustafa Attili

Sent: Tuesday, November 02, 2010 9:13 AM

Joint Replacement

Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

goldie,

i have had the THR since last march and still suffering from limbing and

pain.

my recommendation is not to do it unless you become in a bad need and no

other

way to let you walk.

mustafa

________________________________

From: Tinopener <tinopener@...

<mailto:tinopener%40moggies.freeuk.com> >

Joint Replacement

<mailto:Joint Replacement%40>

Sent: Mon, November 1, 2010 1:22:11 PM

Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

Good luck Goldie - I was really worried about how I'd cope with a knee

replacement, but thought that if I didnt have it my mobility would just get

worse, not better, so I took the plunge. I'm glad I did. But although there

is currently a problem with some hip replacements, I'm sure that another

brand will be used in future - I would hope so, anyway!

Lin

I need a hip replacement but I am worried about getting on , I have been

hearing all this about recalls, I just dont know what to do, I have pain

every day I get tried alot and feel down alot. Thank you all

------------------------------------

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Mustafa-

I'm sorry to hear of your problems. Oddly enough, my first replacement is

the same type of joint (metal on plastic, 32 mm ball). The left one, done a

year later, was done with metal on metal with a larger ball, due to

technological breakthroughs in the field of surface finishing.

Physiotherapy started the day after surgery, first with very simple

exercises like flexing the foot up and down as far as it would go. I don't

know what kind of PT your health system advocates, but I know that I had 6

weeks of home visits from a physiotherapist after surgery and another 6

weeks of outpatient PT at the nearest physiotherapy clinic, all included in

the THR rehab program.

One of the most beneficial exercises for the thigh muscles is standing with

your feet about 40 cm. apart, then slowly putting your weight on the

operated leg until your body is supported by that leg only, then slowly

returning to an even, upright position. I used to do 20 repetitions of

this, 3 or 4 times a day. Make sure you have a solid counter or railing to

hold onto while you're doing this. Stairs are also good, but never overdo

any exercise. Pain is your body's way of telling you that something is too

much. A certain amount of pain is a measure of testing and extending your

limits, but each person has a different pain threshold. Learn what your

limitations are and try to push the envelope, but slowly and carefully.

If you can, consult with a good physiotherapist experienced in THR rehab for

advice.

Best of luck and best regards,

( " Double Hippie " )

RTHR - 2003; LTHR - 2004

_____

From: Joint Replacement

[mailto:Joint Replacement ] On Behalf Of mustafa Attili

Sent: Tuesday, November 02, 2010 10:09 AM

Joint Replacement

Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

michael,

i am pleased to know about a very successful THR case.congratulations and my

best wishes for you to continue with a good health. regarding my case it

seems

that i am unfortunate although the specialist is an expert, he used the

lateral

approach instead of the anterior approach during which part of the medius

muscles were cut and stitched, and a small diameter ball(32mm,metal to

polythelene).however i would like to benifit from your experience in

strengthening the thigh side muscles as the pt requested and any other

advices.

best regards

mustafa

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It took me a full nine months till my limp was gone, and my muscles adapted to

their new way of walking....I  urge you to research doctors and methods while

you are waiting, and know that this can be a surgery that can turn your life

around.  

My life was becoming so limited and yes depressing as I lost the ability to

hike, sit comfortably, walk into a supermarket without hanging onto the basket

for support.  I waited three years with this pain, and having the hip surgery

was the best thing I have ever done for myself.  It took the nine months to get

strong again but now I don't even remember I have the new hip and I have my lie

back. 

And Mustafa, hang in there....it's still not even a year, and these things can

take more time than you had wished.

Helen

From: mustafa Attili <mustafaattili@...>

Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

Joint Replacement

Date: Tuesday, November 2, 2010, 3:13 AM

 

goldie,

i have had the THR since last march and still suffering from limbing and pain.

my recommendation is not to do it unless you become in a bad need and no other

way to let you walk.

mustafa

________________________________

From: Tinopener <tinopener@...>

Joint Replacement

Sent: Mon, November 1, 2010 1:22:11 PM

Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

 

Good luck Goldie - I was really worried about how I'd cope with a knee

replacement, but thought that if I didnt have it my mobility would just get

worse, not better, so I took the plunge. I'm glad I did. But although there

is currently a problem with some hip replacements, I'm sure that another

brand will be used in future - I would hope so, anyway!

Lin

I need a hip replacement but I am worried about getting on , I have been

hearing all this about recalls, I just dont know what to do, I have pain

every day I get tried alot and feel down alot. Thank you all

------------------------------------

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Hi Goldie, You certainly have a tough choice. However, two years seems like a

long time to wait if you are bone on bone. I have a friend who felt she had to

wait till she turned 65, and managed it pretty well. It all depends on how much

pain you are in and how mobile you are. I waited two years after I was first

tole, but I am stubborn and really don't let pain get to me that much. You must

do what your body tells you to do, and if you have the $7,000, you should

probably go for it.

All the best, Joan

________________________________

From: Goldie S. <starwatch1900@...>

Joint Replacement

Sent: Mon, November 1, 2010 3:46:00 PM

Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

I want to do something but I must wait till i am 65 then hopefully medicare will

pay more then the ins I have now, I must lay out $7,000 or more o my. I am 63

dont know if I can make it till then. Have a Blessed day

________________________________

From: Foley <sefoley@...>

Joint Replacement

Sent: Mon, November 1, 2010 10:02:42 AM

Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

I had a knee, not a hip, but I think the same principles would apply.

Of course you¹re tired and depressed!! Anyone would be. Being in that much

pain is not OK, and furthermore, unlike so many things that go wrong with

us, in this case medical science has a CURE, that is, a hip replacement.

I¹ve had many clients who have had hip replacements, and they all praise it

unstintingly. I¹m very happy now that walking doesn¹t hurt any more after I

had my knee replaced, and they say hips are easier than knees. Certainly

they¹ve been doing them longer. These operations are almost always rousing

successes. The ones that don¹t work, and the recalls, those are very rare,

actually.

My advice would be to find an orthopedic surgeon you trust ­ ask around, I

don¹t know where you are geographically ­ and trust his or her judgment on

this. Interview several doctors to find one you have confidence in. (I

talked to three. No, four, actually. ) That¹s what I did, and after that I

deliberately isolated myself from the details (because they freak me out).

I have no idea, for example, what brand of knee prosthetic I received. AND

I DON¹T WANT TO KNOW. I hired my surgeon, who knows all about this stuff,

to make that decision. I am an expert in my own area (tax law) and he

presumably is an expert in his. I¹m certainly not going to learn enough on

the internet or anywhere else to challenge his expertise, and frankly I

wouldn¹t want to.

Do something. Don¹t just sit there in pain.

F

TKR 1/15/09

on 10/31/10 8:44 PM, Goldie at starwatch1900@... wrote:

>

>

>

>

>

> I need a hip replacement but I am worried about getting on , I have been

> hearing all this about recalls, I just dont know what to do, I have pain

> every day I get tried alot and feel down alot. Thank you all

>

>

>

>

>

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michel,

 thank you for your advice.the first three months i did nearly the same simple

exercises as yours, then another month with the PT simple exercises and thermo

water. now i go every three days to the sports club and use the bike ,

treadmill, some weight machines with light weights, steam room, jakosi ,then

swimming. you mentioned a good point that i must not exercise with pain,frankly

i was not comlying with this,but what about pain if it comes from walking and

continues for two days or more, shouldn't i exercise in this case?

mustafa

________________________________

From: on <mdavison@...>

Joint Replacement

Sent: Tue, November 2, 2010 11:07:53 AM

Subject: RE: Hip Replacement

 

Mustafa-

I'm sorry to hear of your problems. Oddly enough, my first replacement is

the same type of joint (metal on plastic, 32 mm ball). The left one, done a

year later, was done with metal on metal with a larger ball, due to

technological breakthroughs in the field of surface finishing.

Physiotherapy started the day after surgery, first with very simple

exercises like flexing the foot up and down as far as it would go. I don't

know what kind of PT your health system advocates, but I know that I had 6

weeks of home visits from a physiotherapist after surgery and another 6

weeks of outpatient PT at the nearest physiotherapy clinic, all included in

the THR rehab program.

One of the most beneficial exercises for the thigh muscles is standing with

your feet about 40 cm. apart, then slowly putting your weight on the

operated leg until your body is supported by that leg only, then slowly

returning to an even, upright position. I used to do 20 repetitions of

this, 3 or 4 times a day. Make sure you have a solid counter or railing to

hold onto while you're doing this. Stairs are also good, but never overdo

any exercise. Pain is your body's way of telling you that something is too

much. A certain amount of pain is a measure of testing and extending your

limits, but each person has a different pain threshold. Learn what your

limitations are and try to push the envelope, but slowly and carefully.

If you can, consult with a good physiotherapist experienced in THR rehab for

advice.

Best of luck and best regards,

( " Double Hippie " )

RTHR - 2003; LTHR - 2004

_____

From: Joint Replacement

[mailto:Joint Replacement ] On Behalf Of mustafa Attili

Sent: Tuesday, November 02, 2010 10:09 AM

Joint Replacement

Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

michael,

i am pleased to know about a very successful THR case.congratulations and my

best wishes for you to continue with a good health. regarding my case it

seems

that i am unfortunate although the specialist is an expert, he used the

lateral

approach instead of the anterior approach during which part of the medius

muscles were cut and stitched, and a small diameter ball(32mm,metal to

polythelene).however i would like to benifit from your experience in

strengthening the thigh side muscles as the pt requested and any other

advices.

best regards

mustafa

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helen,

thank you for your nice feelings,as you said i have to be patient and wait,

still five months to complete a year.

mustafa

________________________________

From: DS <desertsun_2000@...>

Joint Replacement

Sent: Tue, November 2, 2010 12:37:38 PM

Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

 

It took me a full nine months till my limp was gone, and my muscles adapted to

their new way of walking....I  urge you to research doctors and methods while

you are waiting, and know that this can be a surgery that can turn your life

around.  

My life was becoming so limited and yes depressing as I lost the ability to

hike, sit comfortably, walk into a supermarket without hanging onto the basket

for support.  I waited three years with this pain, and having the hip surgery

was the best thing I have ever done for myself.  It took the nine months to get

strong again but now I don't even remember I have the new hip and I have my lie

back. 

And Mustafa, hang in there....it's still not even a year, and these things can

take more time than you had wished.

Helen

From: mustafa Attili <mustafaattili@...>

Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

Joint Replacement

Date: Tuesday, November 2, 2010, 3:13 AM

 

goldie,

i have had the THR since last march and still suffering from limbing and pain.

my recommendation is not to do it unless you become in a bad need and no other

way to let you walk.

mustafa

________________________________

From: Tinopener <tinopener@...>

Joint Replacement

Sent: Mon, November 1, 2010 1:22:11 PM

Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

 

Good luck Goldie - I was really worried about how I'd cope with a knee

replacement, but thought that if I didnt have it my mobility would just get

worse, not better, so I took the plunge. I'm glad I did. But although there

is currently a problem with some hip replacements, I'm sure that another

brand will be used in future - I would hope so, anyway!

Lin

I need a hip replacement but I am worried about getting on , I have been

hearing all this about recalls, I just dont know what to do, I have pain

every day I get tried alot and feel down alot. Thank you all

------------------------------------

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Share on other sites

Mustafa-

Both my replacements were done with the antero-lateral approach (scar on the

side of the hip). From day one, after the anesthetic wore off, the pain had

a different quality, if you can understand that. It was a " cleaner " pain,

not the pain of a joint that was bone-on-bone with no cartilage at all.

If you're still having pain from walking, talk to your surgeon-at seven

months, that shouldn't be happening, unless you're really overdoing the

walking by a wide margin. How long did you walk assisted (crutches or cane)

after surgery?

( " Double Hippie " )

RTHR - 2003; LTHR - 2004

_____

From: Joint Replacement

[mailto:Joint Replacement ] On Behalf Of mustafa Attili

Sent: Tuesday, November 02, 2010 3:23 PM

Joint Replacement

Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

michel,

thank you for your advice.the first three months i did nearly the same

simple

exercises as yours, then another month with the PT simple exercises and

thermo

water. now i go every three days to the sports club and use the bike ,

treadmill, some weight machines with light weights, steam room, jakosi ,then

swimming. you mentioned a good point that i must not exercise with

pain,frankly

i was not comlying with this,but what about pain if it comes from walking

and

continues for two days or more, shouldn't i exercise in this case?

mustafa

________________________________

From: on <mdavison@...

<mailto:mdavison%40bezeqint.net> >

Joint Replacement

<mailto:Joint Replacement%40>

Sent: Tue, November 2, 2010 11:07:53 AM

Subject: RE: Hip Replacement

Mustafa-

I'm sorry to hear of your problems. Oddly enough, my first replacement is

the same type of joint (metal on plastic, 32 mm ball). The left one, done a

year later, was done with metal on metal with a larger ball, due to

technological breakthroughs in the field of surface finishing.

Physiotherapy started the day after surgery, first with very simple

exercises like flexing the foot up and down as far as it would go. I don't

know what kind of PT your health system advocates, but I know that I had 6

weeks of home visits from a physiotherapist after surgery and another 6

weeks of outpatient PT at the nearest physiotherapy clinic, all included in

the THR rehab program.

One of the most beneficial exercises for the thigh muscles is standing with

your feet about 40 cm. apart, then slowly putting your weight on the

operated leg until your body is supported by that leg only, then slowly

returning to an even, upright position. I used to do 20 repetitions of

this, 3 or 4 times a day. Make sure you have a solid counter or railing to

hold onto while you're doing this. Stairs are also good, but never overdo

any exercise. Pain is your body's way of telling you that something is too

much. A certain amount of pain is a measure of testing and extending your

limits, but each person has a different pain threshold. Learn what your

limitations are and try to push the envelope, but slowly and carefully.

If you can, consult with a good physiotherapist experienced in THR rehab for

advice.

Best of luck and best regards,

( " Double Hippie " )

RTHR - 2003; LTHR - 2004

_____

From: Joint Replacement

<mailto:Joint Replacement%40>

[mailto:Joint Replacement

<mailto:Joint Replacement%40> ] On Behalf Of mustafa

Attili

Sent: Tuesday, November 02, 2010 10:09 AM

Joint Replacement

<mailto:Joint Replacement%40>

Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

michael,

i am pleased to know about a very successful THR case.congratulations and my

best wishes for you to continue with a good health. regarding my case it

seems

that i am unfortunate although the specialist is an expert, he used the

lateral

approach instead of the anterior approach during which part of the medius

muscles were cut and stitched, and a small diameter ball(32mm,metal to

polythelene).however i would like to benifit from your experience in

strengthening the thigh side muscles as the pt requested and any other

advices.

best regards

mustafa

No virus found in this incoming message.

Checked by AVG - www.avg.com

Version: 9.0.864 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3232 - Release Date: 11/01/10

21:34:00

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, that is what my OS calls his approach.....

Will be seeing it first hand in 9 days........BARB in Florida

Re: Hip Replacement

michael,

i am pleased to know about a very successful THR case.congratulations and my

best wishes for you to continue with a good health. regarding my case it

seems

that i am unfortunate although the specialist is an expert, he used the

lateral

approach instead of the anterior approach during which part of the medius

muscles were cut and stitched, and a small diameter ball(32mm,metal to

polythelene).however i would like to benifit from your experience in

strengthening the thigh side muscles as the pt requested and any other

advices.

best regards

mustafa

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Checked by AVG - www.avg.com

Version: 9.0.864 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3232 - Release Date: 11/01/10

21:34:00

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Hi Goldie,

Here are my thoughts on when to have your hip replacement. I was on Medicare

and, except for the deductible, the hospital was paid in full. That is the most

expensive part of a hip replacement. However, what will Medicare be in two

years? Will there be restrictions on having different kinds of surgery? Who

knows, maybe only a portion of the hospital will be covered. With the changes

that are going on with Medicare and health insurance in our country right now,

it might not be a good idea to wait for something that might not be there in two

years as it is today. If you can have the surgery now for an out of pocket of

$7K, it might be the right time.

I had both hips replaced in February of this year and I had little to no pain

except for the incisions. I was very quickly back to my regular routine and

needed no PT or outside help. This was probably because I had the Anterior

Approach to hip replacement where no muscles or tendons are cut. And that leads

to my final thought for you. Research carefully the doctor you are allowed

under your insurance. If he/she checks out with flying colors then I would go

for it.

Judy McG

>

> From: Goldie S. <starwatch1900@...>

> Joint Replacement

> Sent: Mon, November 1, 2010 3:46:00 PM

> Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

>

>

> I want to do something but I must wait till i am 65 then hopefully medicare

will

>

> pay more then the ins I have now, I must lay out $7,000 or more o my. I am 63

> dont know if I can make it till then. Have a Blessed day

>

>

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,

I used the walker for two months, the crutche for one month,and since then on

cane. sometimes I walk inside my house without cane. May be I walk around

1000m

daily but not regularly. when I sit more than ten minutes  and stand up and

start walking, my hip pains and the pain  extends to the knee which makes me

limping for the first 20 meters. sometimes when I stop  exercises and walking

and  for two days or more my walking without cane inside the

house improves ,

pain and limping disappears(not noticeable limping), but after that if I go

outside and walk without cane for say 200 meters ,pain and limping starts .

thank you again for your advices .hoping that i am not bothering you with such

long explanation.

mustafa

________________________________

From: on <mdavison@...>

Joint Replacement

Sent: Tue, November 2, 2010 4:45:12 PM

Subject: RE: Hip Replacement

 

Mustafa-

Both my replacements were done with the antero-lateral approach (scar on the

side of the hip). From day one, after the anesthetic wore off, the pain had

a different quality, if you can understand that. It was a " cleaner " pain,

not the pain of a joint that was bone-on-bone with no cartilage at all.

If you're still having pain from walking, talk to your surgeon-at seven

months, that shouldn't be happening, unless you're really overdoing the

walking by a wide margin. How long did you walk assisted (crutches or cane)

after surgery?

( " Double Hippie " )

RTHR - 2003; LTHR - 2004

_____

From: Joint Replacement

[mailto:Joint Replacement ] On Behalf Of mustafa Attili

Sent: Tuesday, November 02, 2010 3:23 PM

Joint Replacement

Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

michel,

thank you for your advice.the first three months i did nearly the same

simple

exercises as yours, then another month with the PT simple exercises and

thermo

water. now i go every three days to the sports club and use the bike ,

treadmill, some weight machines with light weights, steam room, jakosi ,then

swimming. you mentioned a good point that i must not exercise with

pain,frankly

i was not comlying with this,but what about pain if it comes from walking

and

continues for two days or more, shouldn't i exercise in this case?

mustafa

________________________________

From: on <mdavison@...

<mailto:mdavison%40bezeqint.net> >

Joint Replacement

<mailto:Joint Replacement%40>

Sent: Tue, November 2, 2010 11:07:53 AM

Subject: RE: Hip Replacement

Mustafa-

I'm sorry to hear of your problems. Oddly enough, my first replacement is

the same type of joint (metal on plastic, 32 mm ball). The left one, done a

year later, was done with metal on metal with a larger ball, due to

technological breakthroughs in the field of surface finishing.

Physiotherapy started the day after surgery, first with very simple

exercises like flexing the foot up and down as far as it would go. I don't

know what kind of PT your health system advocates, but I know that I had 6

weeks of home visits from a physiotherapist after surgery and another 6

weeks of outpatient PT at the nearest physiotherapy clinic, all included in

the THR rehab program.

One of the most beneficial exercises for the thigh muscles is standing with

your feet about 40 cm. apart, then slowly putting your weight on the

operated leg until your body is supported by that leg only, then slowly

returning to an even, upright position. I used to do 20 repetitions of

this, 3 or 4 times a day. Make sure you have a solid counter or railing to

hold onto while you're doing this. Stairs are also good, but never overdo

any exercise. Pain is your body's way of telling you that something is too

much. A certain amount of pain is a measure of testing and extending your

limits, but each person has a different pain threshold. Learn what your

limitations are and try to push the envelope, but slowly and carefully.

If you can, consult with a good physiotherapist experienced in THR rehab for

advice.

Best of luck and best regards,

( " Double Hippie " )

RTHR - 2003; LTHR - 2004

_____

From: Joint Replacement

<mailto:Joint Replacement%40>

[mailto:Joint Replacement

<mailto:Joint Replacement%40> ] On Behalf Of mustafa

Attili

Sent: Tuesday, November 02, 2010 10:09 AM

Joint Replacement

<mailto:Joint Replacement%40>

Subject: Re: Hip Replacement

michael,

i am pleased to know about a very successful THR case.congratulations and my

best wishes for you to continue with a good health. regarding my case it

seems

that i am unfortunate although the specialist is an expert, he used the

lateral

approach instead of the anterior approach during which part of the medius

muscles were cut and stitched, and a small diameter ball(32mm,metal to

polythelene).however i would like to benifit from your experience in

strengthening the thigh side muscles as the pt requested and any other

advices.

best regards

mustafa

No virus found in this incoming message.

Checked by AVG - www.avg.com

Version: 9.0.864 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3232 - Release Date: 11/01/10

21:34:00

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Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

Hello I dont know if I am going about this the right way, I have never

posted before, my dr told me I need a hip replacememt, I have alot of

pain in my leg and a bad back, I dont know what to do, I have ins but

what they dont pay we surely can not afford, the pain is really getting

me down, I have been reading what others are saying who have had a

replacement, but I just dont know what to do.

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Share on other sites

Goldie, I certainly understand your concern over the bills you will have after a

hip replacement, but I would encourage you to get the hip replacement as soon as

possible.  You can work out a payment plan with the hospital and your doctors

and as long as you keep making a small payment toward paying off your balance,

they will work with you.  I say that from experience!

I also encourage you to get the hip replacement from experience.  I had mine

replaced this past March 30th and it is the best thing I have ever done for

myself.  After having lived with that incredible pain for many years, I feel

like I have been reborn.  I have my life back.  I can walk in the mall with my

husband, I can shave my legs, I can cut my own toe nails, I can sleep through

the night, turn over in bed, carry a basket of laundry and stand up from a

sitting position --- all without any pain at all.  Just think about that,

because I know how you must be living right now.

Do it, you'll find a way to pay for it, you'll work it out.  Don't find excuses

for years the way I did, because I can tell you for sure, I wish I had those

years back!

From: Goldie <starwatch1900@...>

Subject: HIP REPLACEMENT

Joint Replacement

Date: Wednesday, November 10, 2010, 11:49 PM

Hello I dont know if I am going about this the right way, I have never

posted before, my dr told me I need a hip replacememt, I have alot of

pain in my leg and a bad back, I dont know what to do, I have ins but

what they dont pay we surely can not afford, the pain is really getting

me down, I have been reading what others are saying who have had a

replacement, but I just dont know what to do.

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