But even if youre conscientious about performing prescribed exercises and using other non-surgical strategies, your hip joint may continue to deteriorate. You may reach the point where you have a difficult time getting around even with a cane and you worry that a walker or wheelchair may be next. This is the time to ask an orthopedic surgeon about hip replacement.
Every year, in the United States alone, about 170,000 THRs are performed in adults aged 20 to 100. Virtually everyone who undergoes the procedure can walk farther and faster than they could before surgery. Although THR cannot restore the ability to run or participate in other high-impact activities or contact sports, otherwise healthy, well-motivated THR patients nearly always can and should resume low-impact activities, including brisk walking, cycling, swimming, hiking, doubles tennis, golfing, and bowling. In elderly patients, THR often restores functional independence.
The hip prosthesis can be secured with special glue (a cemented procedure) or by using a ball and socket with a porous coating that allows bone to grow into the artificial parts (cementless procedure). In a "hybrid" procedure, the socket is fixed with the porous material, and the ball is cemented in place. Cementless procedures typically hold up better over the long term, but they arent appropriate for everyone.
Many hip replacement surgeries can be performed under regional anesthesia and takes about two hours. Potential complications include infection and formation of blood clots (deep vein thrombosis), but the percentage of patients who experience these problems is low.
Dislocation of your new hip is another concern during the recovery period. The components of the artificial hip are smaller than those of the natural hip, and the ball can become dislodged with certain body movements. In the hospital, you will be shown how to avoid unsafe movements while your hip is healing.
You can expect to use a walker or crutches for about three weeks and then switch to full weight bearing with the use of a cane. Most patients would not need a cane indoors after about four to five weeks and are off all external support in six to eight weeks.
A physical examination and x-ray studies should be performed every 12 to 18 months. If loosening or other evidence that the prosthesis may fail is discovered, the prosthesis should be removed and replaced. This procedure, known as revision surgery, is nearly always successful. However, the results are generally not as good as they are after the initial procedure. The need for revision surgery can be delayed or eliminated by postponing the initial THR until hip pain significantly interferes with daily life and walking distance decreases to about a mile or less. Many experts endorse these criteria.
Although osteoarthritis is the most common reason for THR, the procedure can relieve chronic hip pain due to rheumatoid arthritis, bone tumors, and certain other underlying causes. THR is used less frequently for hip fractures, which are more often repaired with plates, screws, and pins rather than an entirely new artificial joint.
Chronic medical problems are not usually an obstacle to THR. Heart disease, diabetes, and chronic obstructive lung disease (emphysema or chronic bronchitis) rarely cause the procedure to be postponed. THR can even be performed in people with bone quality and density that are significantly compromised by osteoporosis. Medical problems that may delay surgery include active infections, uncontrolled hypertension, or unstable chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Newer alternatives to the metal-on-plastic design include ceramic-on-ceramic (which is what Jack Nicklaus had) and metal-on-metal versions. Most surgeons believe that these two alternatives are more durable than the conventional implant, even if the cross-linked polyethylene is an improvement. Perhaps the main drawback is cost. For example, a ceramic-on ceramic implant is twice as expensive as a conventional metal-on-plastic implant. So the conservative approach at present is to reserve the longer-lasting, more expensive implants for younger and more active patients and to stick with the conventional design for older and less active people.
However, whatever hip prosthesis is used, the bottom line is this: If the arthritis in your hip is interfering with your day-to-day activities, or the pain has become unbearable, hip replacement surgery can help you reclaim your life. For such people, its hip to have a new hip!