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    Hip Arthritis

    The term arthritis literally means soreness of a joint, but is commonly used to describe any condition in which there is undermine to the cartilage. Hip arthritis is a major problem for a lot people; it arises as a result of deterioration, whether common or accelerated, by rheumatoid arthritis, trauma, or joint collapse caused by a fault of blood supply to the femoral head (the ball of the joint).

    The hip is made up of a ball and a socket that is resistant to wear. Joint surfaces are covered with smooth layer of cartilage, which functions as a shock absorber along with the common joint lubrication supplied by the joint lining. As a result, they provide smooth low friction surface. This surface cartilage however, has a limited capacity to heal itself. As it wears away, bone is exposed. Once the bone surfaces obtain in contact, they cause pain while the cartilage has no sensation. The soreness caused by the wreckage of joint wear, causes pain and stiffness, and leads to a new bone reaction of loss of motion. When this happens, hip joint replace is sometimes needed. This is the bulk common with advancing age; however, there may be cases where one may be liable to early or accelerated wear that requires earlier replace surgery.

    Symptoms
    Hip arthritis symptoms generally beginning slightly. Walking endurance diminishes over a lot years to the point where one or two blocks of walking would call for resting. The pain of hip arthritis is increased by activity and cold damp weather. The arthritic hip loses range of motion slowly especially rotation. Climbing or descending stairs or arising from a chair is especially painful, activities of everyday living becomes difficult.

    Diagnosis
    Diagnosis is usually simple. Arthritis can be easily seen on plain X-rays. Hip motion is generally limited and painful, and the pain is often in the groin or radiates into the thigh or even to the knee. In cases where the x-ray and physical exam does not match the pain complaints, other tests may be done, such as MRI, bone, scan, or joint injection test to limit on the cause and source of the pain.

    Surgery
    Replacing the worn joint via surgery is usually performed on both the ball and the cup of the hip except in cases where there is a fracture present. Generally, the cup of the hip is replaced with a metal shell which is rough on its outer surface and encourages bone ingrowths. The femoral stem is cemented into the marrow canal of the femoral shaft, pressing on to this a metal ball with a difficult plastic liner locked into the metal cup, forming a stable joint that can be walked upon right away.

    A patient who would undergo total hip replace should be ideally greater than sixty years old and with wonderful health. There should be no history of prior hip infection, because any incessant or recurrent infection elsewhere may lead to late prosthetic infection.

    Treatment of hip arthritis should commence with the the bulk basic steps, like weight loss, activity modification, walking aids, physical therapy, anti-inflammatory medications and joint supplements. Treatments of hip arthritis vary from patient to patient, and that is why discussion about proper treatments with your doctor is always required.

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