
|
Channels
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Medical Health Encyclopedia
Hip joint replacement
From Healthscout's partner site on chronic pain, HealthCentral.com
Hip joint replacement is surgery to replace all or part of the hip joint with an artificial joint. The artificial joint is called a prosthesis. Alternative Names
Hip arthroplasty; Total hip replacement; Hip hemiarthroplasty Description The artificial hip joint has four parts:
![]() You may receive general anesthesia before this surgery. This means you will be unconscious and unable to feel pain. You may have a spinal or epidural anesthesia. In this kind of anesthesia, medicine is put into your back to make you numb below your waist. After you receive anesthesia, your surgeon will make a surgical cut to open up your hip joint. Often this cut is over the buttocks. Then your surgeon will:
This surgery usually takes 1 to 3 hours. Why the Procedure Is Performed The most common reason to have a hip joint replaced is to relieve severe arthritis pain that is limiting your activities. Hip joint replacement is usually done in people age 60 and older. Younger people who have a hip replaced may put extra stress on the artificial hip. That extra stress can cause it to wear out. Part or all of the joint may need to be replaced again if that happens. | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
Search
Health Tools
Featured Conditions
Resources
Find a Therapist
PR Newswire
|
New Features
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||