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Here comes a life adventure
Around Christmastime I get to have my right hip replaced.
I'm actually kind of thrilled about this. For literally years I've been slowly working on a lot of pain in my groin muscle. I thought it was tendinitis, and I was using massage and physical therapy and a hot tub and a lot of NSAIDs on the pain. Some movements were unlocking while others became inaccessible.
My own fault for not accessing actual medicine as soon as I should have, but my fellow Americans will understand why I didn't. (The physical therapist my doctor had sent me to had been treating six of us at the same time. "Here's a stretchy band. Follow this photocopied exercise sheet while I work with the person behind the next curtain.")
But now I've had an xray and I have surgery scheduled, and if all goes well then next year walking and yoga and swimming will come back into my life.
I work from home and have never met most of my coworkers; they know me from a headshot and a name, which happens to be one of the classic millennial names. I just put a note in one of my Teams chats: "In case youre confused because most people with this name are young ... I'm not."
If you have tips to share, bring 'em on!
I'm actually kind of thrilled about this. For literally years I've been slowly working on a lot of pain in my groin muscle. I thought it was tendinitis, and I was using massage and physical therapy and a hot tub and a lot of NSAIDs on the pain. Some movements were unlocking while others became inaccessible.
My own fault for not accessing actual medicine as soon as I should have, but my fellow Americans will understand why I didn't. (The physical therapist my doctor had sent me to had been treating six of us at the same time. "Here's a stretchy band. Follow this photocopied exercise sheet while I work with the person behind the next curtain.")
But now I've had an xray and I have surgery scheduled, and if all goes well then next year walking and yoga and swimming will come back into my life.
I work from home and have never met most of my coworkers; they know me from a headshot and a name, which happens to be one of the classic millennial names. I just put a note in one of my Teams chats: "In case youre confused because most people with this name are young ... I'm not."
If you have tips to share, bring 'em on!
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(And how is your hip currently like one of the Canadian bands on the due South soundtrack? I'll bet you can guess what I mean....)
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The only tip I’ve got is omg do the recovery exercises they give you, but that is based on observation of family members not doing them diligently and later wishing they had. Yay for a reduced-pain future!
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Tripping and falling is indeed a hazard! Fall prevention is a science and there are tons of resources around about yes, rugs, but also shoes and other things--your PTs and the internet have some, and I can dig up some, too, if you like. (Aside: I am a trauma surgeon. Falls are indeed in my bailiwick, but usually the consequences thereof. Hip replacements... less so.)
But the primary concern for ensuring you do all your PT post op is that if you don't work the muscles supporting the joint, you'll get stiff, lose mobility, lose muscle mass, get weak--and then yes, fall. But those other things mean that you'll recover worse from subsequent falls, or other illnesses. Maintaining muscle mass, strength (especially core strength, and the muscles of the hip qualify) and balance are key as we get older.
It is indeed personally annoying that the body needs maintenance. I find it very annoying myself. But exercise and PT are so foundational, unfortunately.
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I giggled at 1/6 of a PT. I'm fairly certain that it *is* possible to get a whole PT, but I may have to go back to my GP or surgeon and ask for a different referral if the first one they offer turns out to be fractional.
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"I just did the exercises."
"Nobody does those."
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Wow. That's a better recovery time than a ceasarian.
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Hee! That's a good point. Here, at least, after a ceasarian you can't drive for 4 weeks or lift anything heavy for 6.
I just assumed your be off your feet for a hip replacement for much longer. So a week is great.
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IT'S THE ABDOMINAL HERNIA RISK! Gotta let the belly wall heal. The orthopods mostly split the muscle fibers rather than cut them, and also your leg can't have a hernia... usually.
[ retreats into surgeon cave ]
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Huh. That's cool to know!
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A friend who did it told me that it was important to do the recovery exercise, and there were routines that you could do at home. You can ask the hospital therapists for instructions and diagrams.
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cheers
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It will improve your life! Of course this is something to celebrate!
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I'm supposed to get a call from a - I don't have the booklet with me so I don't remember the job title, but it sounded like a wedding planner only for surgery - that may be who I'm supposed to get this infofrom.
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I second the 'do the exercises'. My aunt had knee surgery, didn't do the exercises and went downhill fast to the point that she's in a wheelchair now.
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They gave me a booklet, and among the presurgical tips are exercises to start doing beforehand, which is interesting.
There are a couple that involve lying down and sliding your foot across the floor in various directions; my current PT tried something similar with me, but it was too difficult on carpet. So I was impressed by the solution the booklet has: put a cookie sheet under your foot!
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The booklet mentions protein afterwards but doesn't say anything about beforehand. How *far* beforehand? Luckily I eat meat, so it shouldn't be too complicated.
This is also the first time I've seen information about adding fiber to the diet to counteract the effects of the painkillers, which I appreciate. Normally they talk like adding another pill is all you need to do.
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So glad you're getting the surgery--wishing you the best! I know several people who had hip or knee replacements, and they were transformative.
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Re: nutrition: honestly, no one knows for sure. The pancreatic surgery paper I think was on the order of a month; my guess is that's probably enough, unless you're malnourished in some way, which is unlikely?
Re: fiber: yes, absolutely! But depending on your colon and the amount of painkillers you take, it may not be enough. I trained in general surgery, so I'm obsessed with the guts and preventing constipation. My rule is anyone who is taking opiates also is offered a senna daily--prevention is better than cure, but we're biased: we are the ones who take out exploded colons (rare! not a threat!). My advice is to have a very itchy finger on the trigger of the back-up drugs :)
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It's great that they include helpful tips like that one!
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I can see how rehab must be really hard, because we're told contradictory things about pain, and it's hard to know what's a "if it hurts then do it slower and stop half an inch sooner and then put some ice on it" and what's a "don't keep doing that! Pain means stop!"
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Also they said the recovery time is less than for a knee replacement, which boggled me.
Good wishes to you!!!
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Best wishes!
(Listening to podfic is how I get through my exercises)
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