Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Hip replacement


Related Topics

In the News (Sun 27 Dec 09)

  
  Hip replacement - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In this X-ray, the patient’s right hip (on the left in the photograph) has been replaced, with the “ball” of this ball-and-socket joint replaced by a metal head that is set in the thighbone or femur and the socket replaced by a white plastic cup (clear in this X-ray).
Hip replacement is a medical procedure in which the hip joint is replaced by a synthetic implant.
The main complications of hip arthroplasty (replacement) are wear of the polyethylene liner, loosening of the joint components, and infection of the joint.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Hip_replacement   (984 words)

  
 Hip Replacement
Hip replacement, or arthroplasty, is a surgical procedure in which the diseased parts of the hip joint are removed and replaced with new, artificial parts.
During hip replacement, the surgeon removes the diseased bone tissue and cartilage from the hip joint.
The most common later complication of hip replacement surgery is an inflammatory reaction to tiny particles that gradually wear off of the artificial joint surfaces and are absorbed by the surrounding tissues.
www.drbathaw.com /hip.htm   (2218 words)

  
 The Steadman-Hawkins Clinic
Hip arthritis is a degenerative condition that affects the hip joint, and often leads to a significant impairment in the quality of life.
The stability of the hip joint is maintained by the precise fit of the femoral head within the acetabulum.
Hip arthritis is any condition that leads to degeneration of the hip joint and its cartilage surfaces.
www.steadman-hawkins.com /hip/overview.asp   (603 words)

  
 MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia: Hip joint replacement
This surgery is performed to replace all or part of the hip joint with an artificial device (a prosthesis).
The hip is essentially a ball and socket joint, linking the "ball" at the head of the thigh bone (femur) with the cup-shaped "socket" in the pelvic bone.
Hip joint replacement is primarily done in people age 60 and older.
www.nlm.nih.gov /medlineplus/ency/article/002975.htm   (1382 words)

  
 MDchoice.com Hip Replacement
The goals of hip replacement surgery are to improve mobility by relieving pain and improve function of the hip joint.
Before suggesting hip replacement surgery, the doctor is likely to try walking aids such as a cane, or non-surgical therapies such as medication and physical therapy.
Hip replacement is one of the most successful orthopaedic surgeries performed—more than 90 percent of people who have hip replacement surgery will never need revision surgery.
mdchoice.com /Pt/consumer/hiprepqa.asp   (2275 words)

  
 HIP REPLACEMENT -- Arthritis Hip Surgery Info - Hip Replacement
The modern Hip Replacement was invented in 1962 by Sir John Charnley, an orthopedic surgeon working in a small country hospital in England.
The major long-term problems with hip replacements are wearing out of the socket, and loosening of the bond between the implant and the bone.
The hip joint can be approached from the front of the hip (anterior approach), from the back (posterior approach), from the side (trans-trochanteric approach), from midway between front and side (antero-lateral approach), or through a two incision approach (one anterior, and one posterior).
www.hipsandknees.com /hip/hipsurgery.htm   (1244 words)

  
 Hip Replacement Surgery : Hip joint replacement solutions
Hip replacement surgery removes the arthritic ball of the upper femur (thighbone) as well as the damaged cartilage from the hip socket.
In total hip joint replacement, the femoral component can be secured to your body in one of two ways: using bone cement as a grout to affix the components to your bone, or using a "cementless" component that is specially designed to allow your own bone to grow into the surface of the implant.
In the case of the hip, it is where the head of the femoral component meets the acetabular socket.
www.biomet.com /patients/hip_replacement.cfm   (1431 words)

  
 Hip Replacement at the Center for Total Joint Replacement
Hip replacement surgery involves replacing the stem (long part of the bone) and head of the femur and the acetabular "cup" with prosthetic components.
Hip replacement surgery is done through an incision about 6 to 12 cm (2 to 5 inches) in length, which is later closed with sutures or staples.
Patients with cemented hip replacements can put pressure on the leg right away, while those with ingrowth replacements need to allow about 6 weeks for the bone to grow in and be more protected.
www.pamf.org /joints/procedures/hip.html   (382 words)

  
 Hip replacement
Total hip replacement has evolved to be one of the most predictable and reliable medical procedures available.
Total hip replacement is an operation designed to replace a hip joint that has been  damaged, usually by arthritis.
In a total hip replacement operation, the surgeon replaces the worn head of the thigh bone with a metal or ceramic ball mounted on a stem, while the socket is resurfaced with a polyethylene (plastic) or polyethylene lined metal cup.
www.stryker.co.uk /index/st_pag_patients-home/st_pag_patients-hip/st_pag_patients-hip-replacement.htm   (604 words)

  
 Hip Replacement - Symptoms, Treatment and Prevention
Hip replacement surgery, also called total hip arthroplasty (THA), hip resurfacing, or total hip resurfacing may be an option if your daily activities are limited by uncontrollable pain and your x-rays show an end-stage arthritis not amenable to other treatments.
Hip disorders or fractures: Hip replacement surgery is also used to repair disorders and fractures of the hip, although less commonly.
Total Hip Replacement: Both the ball and the socket are replaced; the socket is replaced wit ha metallic or plastic cup (with or without screws), while the ball is replaced with a ball attached to a long stem.
www.healthscout.com /ency/1/283/main.html   (978 words)

  
 Rothman Institute Orthopaedics: The Hip
The hip is a ball and socket joint that acts much like a ball bearing, allowing you to turn in different directions while supporting the body.
Cemented total hip replacement uses cement to secure an implant to the bone, while with cementless technology the bone heals directly to the prosthesis.
Theoretically, cementless hip replacements should have a longer lifetime and are desirable in patients who have good enough bone quality to accommodate a cementless implant.
rothmaninstitute.com /patienteducation/joint/hip/index.html   (1381 words)

  
 New Alternative to Hip Replacement
It is this neck length and angle that determines the natural length of a patient's leg after surgery, and since it is not removed and replaced with an artificial device during the resurfacing procedure, there is a greater likelihood of maintaining accurate leg length.
While the implant closely matches the size of a patient's natural femoral head (hip ball), it is substantially larger than the femoral head of a traditional total hip replacement implant.
The Birmingham Hip implant is an all-metal ball and socket joint.
news.med.cornell.edu /nyp/nyp_2006/05_19_06.shtml   (521 words)

  
 Hip replacement operation & total hip joint surgery - BUPA UK
A hip replacement replaces a hip joint that has been damaged or worn away, usually by arthritis or injury.
Instead of removing the head of the thigh bone and replacing it with an artificial ball, the diseased or damaged surfaces of the hip joint are replaced with metal surfaces.
A cemented hip replacement usually lasts for at least 10 years, after which it may need to be replaced.
hcd2.bupa.co.uk /fact_sheets/html/Hip_replacement.html   (1452 words)

  
 Hip Replacement | General Surgery - Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center
Hip replacements may be recommended for people who have not responded to other treatment options, such as exercises or medications.
or Total Hip Replacement is surgery to replace all or part of the hip joint with an artificial device to restore joint movement (a prosthesis).
The hip is made of a ball and a socket joint, linking the dome at the head of the thigh bone (femur) and the cup in the pelvic bone.
www1.wfubmc.edu /gs/Hip-Replacement.htm   (602 words)

  
 Questions and Answers about Hip Replacement   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Hip replacement may be problematic for people with some health problems, regardless of their age.
During a traditional hip replacement, which lasts from 1 to 2 hours, the surgeon makes a 6- to 8-inch incision over the side of the hip through the muscles and removes the diseased bone tissue and cartilage from the hip joint, while leaving the healthy parts of the joint intact.
However, because more people are having hip replacements at a younger age, and wearing away of the joint surface becomes a problem after 15 to 20 years, replacement of an artificial joint, which is also known as revision surgery, is becoming more common.
www.niams.nih.gov /hi/topics/hip/hiprepqa.htm   (3095 words)

  
 Hip Replacement Surgery — From the Cleveland Clinic
Hip replacement surgery is a procedure in which a doctor surgically removes a painful or damaged hip joint and replaces it with an artificial joint.
During standard hip replacement surgery, you are given general anesthesia to relax your muscles and put you into a temporary deep sleep.
Hip replacements surgeries have been performed for years and surgical techniques are being improved all the time.
www.webmd.com /content/article/78/95617.htm   (1117 words)

  
 Hip Replacement
To duplicate this action, a total hip replacement implant has three parts: the stem, which fits into the femur and provides stability; the ball, which replaces the spherical head of the femur; and the cup, which replaces the worn-out hip socket.
In most cases, the pelvic socket is left intact and the head of the femur is replaced, using a component similar to those of a total hip replacement.
The operation is sometimes performed for other problems such as hip fractures or aseptic necrosis (a condition in which the bone of the hip ball dies).
www.dhmc.org /ortho/hip/Hip_Implants.html   (695 words)

  
 Hip Replacement
According to the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, approximately 120,000 hip replacement operations are performed each year in the United States and less than 10% require further surgery.
Hip replacement is one of the most successful orthopaedic surgeries performed — more than 90% of people who have hip replacement surgery will never need revision surgery.
Doctors consider revision surgery if medication and lifestyle changes do not relieve pain and disability, or if X-rays of the hip show that damage has occurred to the artificial hip that must be corrected before it is too late for a successful revision.
www.medicalmoment.org /_content/risks/nov03/181544.asp   (823 words)

  
 Total hip replacement: Relieve pain, improve mobility - MayoClinic.com
Hip replacement is usually considered once other therapies, such as pain medications, have failed.
Hip replacement is also used in people with hip injuries, rheumatoid arthritis and other medical conditions, such as a bone tumor or bone loss due to insufficient blood supply (avascular necrosis).
Hip replacement surgery involves replacing the femoral head — the "ball" of your thighbone — with a metal ball.
www.mayoclinic.com /health/hip-replacement/AR00028   (1480 words)

  
 Total Hip Replacement
The modular prosthetic hip replacement systems used today have three components – the femoral stem, the femoral head, and the acetabulum.
Replacement of implants due to wear and tear has not been necessary in dogs partly because dogs weigh less than people, their weight is distributed on four rather than two legs, and their average life span is considerably shorter.
Radiographs of the hips are used to confirm the diagnosis of osteoarthritis.
www.gcvs.com /surgery/total_hip.htm   (1164 words)

  
 University Orthopaedics -- Hip Replacement
Severe cases of osteoarthritis are treated surgically by replacing the diseased hip with an artificial hip.
A: Hip replacement surgery is a major operative procedure that requires either a general or regional anesthetic.
However, as more and more people have hip replacement surgery at a younger age, and as life expectancy continues to lengthen, surgery to repair or replace the original prosthesis (called revision surgery) is becoming more common.
www.uortho.com /hip.html   (1461 words)

  
 Department of Clinical Sciences - Orthopedics - Total Hip Replacement
Total hip replacement is an alternative to femoral head and neck excision in large and giant breed dogs (50 lbs.
The most frequent reason for performing a total hip replacement is relief of pain and disability caused by severe degenerative joint disease secondary to hip dysplasia or fracture.
The diseased femoral head in the hip joint is replaced by a metal ball on a stem that fits inside the femur.
www.cvm.ncsu.edu /docs/ortho_hip.html   (996 words)

  
 Hip joint replacement
The hip joint is a ball-in-socket joint where the ball or head of the femur (thigh bone) joins the pelvis at the socket called the acetabulum.
Hip Joint replacement or Total Hip Replacement is surgery to replace all or part of the hip joint with an artificial device to restore joint movement (a prosthesis).
Hip joint replacement is mostly done in older people.
www.besthealth.com /besthealth/surgery/english/pages/100006.html   (1330 words)

  
 Hip Replacement
This ball and socket mechanism at the hip must be stable enough to bear the weight of the upper body and rotate freely enough to give the femur a free range of motion.
When walking and other simple movement requiring rotation of the hip become painful, or when a hip joint is traumatized or dislocated, an orthopedic surgeon will examine the patient and take X-rays of the hip joint.
During the hip replacement procedure, the head of the femur is removed and replaced with a titanium prosthesis or small metal ball.
www.reachoutmichigan.org /funexperiments/agesubject/lessons/newton/hipintro.html   (884 words)

  
 Hip replacement surgery
Total hip replacement surgery replaces the upper end of the thighbone (femur) with a metal ball and resurfaces the hip socket in the pelvic bone with a metal shell and plastic liner.
Rehabilitation (rehab) after hip replacement surgery may vary depending on whether the surgeon used cement or cementless methods to attach the joint replacement surfaces.
If you need more than one joint replacement surgery, such as a knee and a hip, there are some general guidelines that may help you and your doctor decide in which order to do the surgeries.
www.webmd.com /hw/arthritis/aa14678.asp   (2543 words)

  
 Hip Replacement
Mayo Clinic performs thousands of hip replacement surgeries each year, and more than 35,000 surgeries have been completed since the first total hip arthroplasty approved by the Food and Drug Administration was performed at Mayo in 1969.
Candidates for hip replacement surgery are generally healthy, have tried other treatment options, and experience chronic pain and limited mobility.
Although total hip arthroplasty increases the range of motion and significantly reduces pain in the hip joint, this procedure is not a quick fix for every patient with chronic hip pain.
www.mayoclinic.org /hipreplacement-rst/index.html   (509 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.