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MarkerBilateral Hip Replacement

 
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Bilateral Hip Replacement (Operation on both hips)

Patients with both hips equally painful and stiff often wonder whether both hips will need total hip replacement operation, and whether it will be possible to walk on two artificial hip joints.

 

The surgery that replaces both worn hips is called bilateral total hip operation.

 

You should know that bilateral hip surgery is done routinely and it presents one of the most spectacular successes of the total hip replacement surgery.

 

This is so because two impaired hips cause much more symptoms than twice the symptoms caused by one diseased hip. Patients with both hips affected have no healthy leg to rely on!

 


Bilateral Hip Replacement


 


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Staged Total Hip Replacement

 

The surgeon may replace your destructed hip joints one at a time, at two separate operations, often several months apart one from the other. You will need two hospital stays, two anesthesia and two rehabilitation periods. The surgeons call these two surgeries for Staged Total Hip Replacement.

 

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Simultaneous Bilateral Total Hip Replacement

 

But if you have both hips equally painful and stiff, it is possible to have both hips replaced with total hip prostheses during one operation seance, under one anesthesia. The operations are followed by a single rehabilitation period within one hospital stay. Such two simultaneous surgeries are called Simultaneous Bilateral Total Hip Replacement.

 

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Who should have a Bilateral Total Hip replacement?

 

Patients of almost all ages who have severe pain and stiffness in both hips; patients whose hip impairment makes their lives miserable, restricts considerably their activities of daily living , and progresses over time.

 

Especially patients with fixed deformity of both hips and concomitant impairment of the back (lumbar spine) are candidates for bilateral total hip replacement. Fixed deformity of both hip joint imposes strain on low back and these patients often have more symptoms from their back spines than from their hip joints.

 

Also patients with bilateral painful osteoarthritis of the hip joints and contemplated total knee replacement should have both hips operated first.

 


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Should the X-ray changes of the other hip alone decide the bilateral operation?

 

If you have one bad hip and one good hip and both hips show X-ray signs of osteoarthritis, should you have both hips replaced at once?

  • No. You should have total hip replacement only of that hip which gives you pain and stiffness.

  • You should not have bilateral total hip replacement only because X-rays of both of your hips show osteoarthritic changes.

  • There is, however, a 54 % chance that you will need a total hip replacement of the second symptomless hip (with apparent X-ray changes) during the next ten years.

(If your second hip shows no X-ray changes, there is still an 8 % chance that you will need total hip replacement of this healthy hip during the next ten years. -Ritter et al. 1996.)

 


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Will the impairment of the other hip recede after operation on one side?

 

It is possible, but it is not predictable. It is no idea to wait too long with the operation of the other painful hip in these cases:

  • All patients with severe flexion deformity in both of their hips (hips that are stiff in forward bent position)

  • All patients with failed total hip arthroplasty on one side and impairment of the other hip joint. These patients need a "good hip to stand on" while being treated for the failed total hip.

  • Aged patients. In these patients a medical complication may develop and prevent the second operation. An elderly patient, who was suffering misery from bilateral hip impairment is able to function "normally" in 2 to 3 weeks after bilateral replacement. The psychical state (depression) of these patients often improves after their source of pain has been removed.

My total hip replacement on one side has been infected, can I have total hip replacement of the opposite painful hip?

 

Yes, of course. The combination of one already failed total hip arthroplasty with severely impaired other hip (opposite) is extremely incapacitating.

 

Total hip replacement of the impaired contralateral (opposite) hip is the only possible solution of the patient misery.

 

The risk of blood-borne infection from the infected contralateral hip is, of course, present, but with careful antibiotic treatment and prevention, this risk is low. (Eftekhar, 1994)

 

 

Who is the candidate for a Staged Total Hip replacement?

 

Because the staged operations put less stress on you heart and circulation system, this is a choice for patients with cardiac, circulatory and pulmonary diseases, or for older patients (arbitrarily > 75).

 

 

Who is the candidate for Simultaneous Total Hip Replacement?

 

Because this simultaneous surgery include increased stress on the patient's cardiovascular system, the candidates must be carefully selected. Only patients in good health condition, without any cardiac, circulatory and pulmonary diseases, and younger than 75 years old are appropriate candidates.

 

The decision to undergo Simultaneous Total hip replacement must be taken after careful consultation between the medical consultant (cardiologist), the anesthesiologist, the surgeon, and the patient.

 

If you consider this surgery, you will also need a good general muscle condition, because the initial rehabilitation will demand more work from your arms than usually. During the first weeks after the Simultaneous THR, you will namely have "no good leg to stand on".

 

 

What are the results of these operations?

 

Several statistics show that both types of procedures produce equivalent and equally good results.



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