I am booked for the resurfacing of my left hip my Mr Mcminn in Birmingham next week nervous but more concerned as my right hip is feeling familiar in terms of a light groin pull and aching in my glute muscle ,,,, is it me or is it very common for the good hip to follow .... Any help or comments would be good ..
I'm 46 active cyclist rower and weight trainer ,,, I gave up running last year when the pain was to much before I realised the hip had worn out.
Chris.
I had about 4 years before the other hip started acting up. Although it look bad on the X-rays when I had my first one done it did not hurt at that time. It depends on a lot of factors including wear & tear and genetics. I have heard of many people that only need one done during their life.
Good luck and try not to be nervous. It will go quickly and you will be back to an active lifestyle.
Bill
Thanks Bill ,, hard to know what hurts for real I guess until the first one is done
Good feedback
Your good hip could hurt because your compensating for your bad one.
Play it by ear, Chris. Your body has been under attack, so until it stabilizes once it realizes you've done something really nice for it, you don't really know what hurts for real and what not.
Has anyone looked at an XRay of the other hip and seen the signs of OA?
I have an X-ray from a month ago and all looked well ,,, think ,my fear is the speed my left one failed went from early signs to useless in 8 months ... Maybe it's pre op over thinking hope so glad this site is here its kept me sane in the early hours ..
My experience is turning out to be very similar to that of others (particularly males who are my approximate age [41 at time of surgery]and have FAI) I have read.
April 2012 I get the "Bad" right hip fixed. At this point I didn't have any pain in the "good" left hip, though it did show FAI. Just as I start ramping up my athletic activities post-surgery, the "good" hip started acting up.
I think it is probable that as one hip really fell apart, the resulting lessened physical activity protected the better hip from doing the same. Once I started being more active than I had been in years post-surgery, the deterioration of the "good" hip accelerated.
This is all just my experience, but again, it is similar to many others I have read.
Mike
Quote from: Miguelito on August 12, 2013, 12:53:09 PM
My experience is turning out to be very similar to that of others (particularly males who are my approximate age [41 at time of surgery]and have FAI) I have read.
April 2012 I get the "Bad" right hip fixed. At this point I didn't have any pain in the "good" left hip, though it did show FAI. Just as I start ramping up my athletic activities post-surgery, the "good" hip started acting up.
I think it is probable that as one hip really fell apart, the resulting lessened physical activity protected the better hip from doing the same. Once I started being more active than I had been in years post-surgery, the deterioration of the "good" hip accelerated.
This is all just my experience, but again, it is similar to many others I have read.
Mike
Mike
I think this is key to the whole debate. The OA cause may be natural or exacerbated by FAI and activities that necessitate different movements to right left sides.
Take a cyclist, with no FAI and a symetrical pedalling motion. OA has every chance of being mirrored both hips in time. In contrast, take a soccer player with FAI on the one side he normally kicks with - every chance of getting OA on that hip but nothing or way less on the other hip.
All comes back to root cause (genetically and activity wise) as far as I can tell
A lot depends on the person. My brother had his Left Hip resurfaced 13 years ago and he has never had problems with his right. I had right resurfaced 20 months ago and am starting to get problems in my left. I did have LCP in both hips as a child though which doesn't help.