HIP TABLE OF CONTENTS
 

ARTHRITIS OF THE HIP JOINT

PROBLEMS YOU MAY ENCOUNTER AT HOME

  1. Excessive swelling of your leg and foot: It is not uncommon to develop some swelling in the first few weeks after surgery. If this occurs, you should elevate your leg whenever you are not up to walking. However, excessive swelling of the foot and lower leg can be due to thrombosis (blood clots) in the veins in the leg.

We should be notified if swelling is associated with pain or tenderness in the calf muscles, or if the swelling just seems over-excessive, and doesn’t respond to elevation.

  1. Chest pain, a cough or shortness of breath may be signs of embolism. Please do not ignore these symptoms. Call us right away.

  2. Drainage from the wound, or increasing redness around the wound, could signify impending infection. Our office should be notified, and in most instances you will need to come in and let Dr. Huddleston take a look at it.

  3. High fever could also be a sign of impending infection. You need to take your temperature twice a day for a month after surgery. Take it three times a day if it is elevated over 99 degrees. If you get two readings, at least three hours apart, of over 100 degrees, you need to notify us immediately.

  4. Increasing hip pain. Pain should be decreasing from day to day. If it seems to be steadily increasing, let us know.

  5. Dislocation of the hip. If your hip dislocates, you will immediately recognize what has happened. You will have severe hip pain, your foot will “point the wrong way” and you will not be able to walk.

    WHAT TO DO IF YOUR HIP DISLOCATES

    If this happens, call Dr. Huddleston immediately and he will meet you in the emergency room of the hospital and relocate the hip. Do not eat or drink anything, since you may need an anesthetic to get the hip back in place. You may be brought to the hospital by car, but, if you have too much pain, an ambulance may be necessary. Sometimes it takes an open operation to get the hip back in place, but most of the time it can be "pulled" back in place.

  6. The operated leg feels too long. After hip replacement, many patients complain that the operated leg feels too long. This is usually a false sensation and goes away after a month or two. It is somewhat akin to the felling one gets that the filling is too prominent after the dentist fills a tooth. A week or so later, the filled tooth feels normal! A great deal of effort is put into trying to get the leg lengths correct. For most surgeons accurate measurement is very difficult during surgery. It is common to be off by a quarter of an inch or so. Most people easily adjust to a difference of a quarter-inch, and are hardly aware of it. Many “normal people” have up to a quarter-inch in difference. Sometimes, however, the patient may feel that the leg is an inch or more too long when, in fact, the leg lengths are absolutely equal. This brings us to the difficult concept of “true” and “apparent” leg length differences. True leg lengths are measured from the pelvis to the ankle. Apparent leg lengths are measured from the navel to the ankle. In a normal person, the true and apparent leg lengths are equal. If one hip is pulled outwards (abducted) by tight ligaments, it will feel too long, even though it is not (and the apparent leg length will be longer than the true leg length). If one hip is pulled inwards (adducted), it will feel too short, even though it is not. Dr. Huddleston uses a technique for measuring leg length in surgery that is extremely accurate and almost fool-proof.

  7. Thigh pain. Patients with cementless hip replacements may have thigh pain for 18 to 24 months after surgery, until the implant is securely locked in place by bone growth. This pain can be expected to be minimal and can be ignored.

IN GENERAL, THE LEG SHOULD BE GETTING BETTER EACH DAY.
IF YOU THINK YOU ARE GETTING WORSE IN ANY WAY,
PLEASE GIVE US A CALL.

On to the Next Section of the Manual:
What To Do If Your Hip Dislocates




Home  |  Hips  |  Knees  |  About Dr. Huddleston  |  Testimonials  |  Newsletter  |  Contact  |  Links

How to Become an Orthopedic Surgeon



Arthritis of the Hip Joint copyright © 2005 Herbert D. Huddleston, MD.
Arthritis of the Knee Joint copyright © 2005 Herbert D. Huddleston, M.D.

Dr. H.D. Huddleston
The Hip and Knee Institute
5525 Etiwanda Ave., #324
Tarzana, CA 91356
Tel: 818.708.9090

Medical Website Design by HealthPresence

Site Last Updated: