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Muscle Rehab

Started by Hank, September 09, 2011, 04:39:31 PM

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Hank

I had left hip BHR resurfacing 5 months ago.  My improvement has been excellent except in one area.   I can walk, ride a bike and play golf walking and pushing my clubs with no pain after having excruciating pain just walking a block prior to the surgery.   However, I have one groin/adductor muscle that will not heal.  When I twist quickly (while awake or while sleeping) or step up on to a high stair (e.g. this week on step ladder)  I get a sharp pain that rather quickly subsides, but it is really a jolt and hurts.

My  PT guessed it was a pectenius muscle, which I had never hear of.   It feels like it got messed up during the surgery and no exercises I have tried thus far have improved it.

Have other folks had this experience?   Any suggestions?   Do i just have to live with it?

ScubaDuck

Your PT tells you what muscle but doesn't give you exercises to strengthen and stretch it?  If so, I would find a new PT.

In my non-professional opinion you know the movements that cause the pain.  Try doing those movements slowly up to the point where you experience pain.  Hold the stretch.  Ice.  It also sounds like strengthening your adductor and abductor muscles would help.  Also try balancing on your operated leg.  Start with a shoe on, then barefoot, then shoe on cushion or soft surface, and then barefoot on soft surface or cushion.  Sometimes we strengthen the bigger muscles and forget about the smaller support ones.

You may find something online.

I have had most of my pain in the last couple weeks (I am just under six weeks) in my groin and upper glute.  I think my body is adjusting to my new leg movement.  With no arthritis pain my leg actually tracks straight forward.  The cycling and aqua jogging I did this morning definitely worked my groin muscles.

Best wishes.

Dan
LHRA, Birmingham, Dr. Pritchett, 8/1/2011
RHRA, EndoTec, Dr. Pritchett, 12/6/2022
fullmetalhip.wordpress.com

Tin Soldier

Hank - I hear a lot of folks here say that 5 months your body is still trying to figure out it's new bearing and soft-tissue is still organizing itself, as Dan points out.  Maybe there is an exercise you are doing too much, maybe a short break will allow the inflammation to go down?  I'd talk to the PT and see what they think, but I wouldn't get too discouraged.  There's still a alot of healing at 5 months.
LBHR 2/22/11, RBHR 8/23/11 - Pritchett.

jgenese

Hank,   I get the same pain. I've gone for x-rays, and CT scans. Everything looks good except for the psoas tendon up against the implant. I'm going for a anestheticâ€"corticosteroid shot the 21st to see if that gives some relief. If that doesn't work, they need to relieve the tendon surgically. By the way, when you make a sudden move do you get a jolting pain?

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