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I am a 51 year-old male and am
now 1 month post-op, having had a RBHR (Right-side Birmingham Hip Resurfacing)
by Dr. Hozack of the Rothman Institute in Northeast Philadelphia. I’d like to
share my story on this outstanding website so it can hopefully help others who
may be facing the same dilemmas I faced when trying to decide on the surgery.
I am an active adult, love
hiking and have always played a lot of basketball (mostly on blacktop) several
times a week up until just this past year. I consider myself healthy and in
good shape at 5’7” and 145 lbs. Over the last dozen years I noticed that I
often had a severe pain in the right hip joint that occurred after playing
basketball. The pain showed up after play, not during, and was the worst the
morning after play, especially when first planting the leg after getting out of
bed. The pain was sharp but fleeting and would cause me to sometimes let my leg
“give” to relieve it – mostly out of surprise because of its sudden onset. The
pain would then go away after warming-up a bit. I dealt with this for a long
time and noticed that it seemed to be gradually getting worse. I also started
to notice pain during long hikes – the pain seemed to be located both in the
groin area and the outside of the hip - again, not too bad since it would just
come and go.
I did not think too much about
it until an event happened while playing touch football on Thanksgiving Day.
While running, I bent down to pick up a fumble and had what felt like a tear in
the hip joint. From that point on I had pain every day and the pain was felt in
the groin and all around the hip, sometimes radiating down the leg to below the
knee. I went to my primary Doc, who ordered X-rays and was quite surprised that
I had moderately severe Osteoarthritis in the right hip (left hip was clean).
My Doc told me that my basketball days were probably over. I said that would be
fine but I just would like to be able to continue hiking!
My primary Doc referred me to a
local Orthopaedic Doc in my area (Lehigh Valley, PA). First step he tried was
physical therapy, which after several weeks did not seem to help too much. (I
also had been doing core-strengthening exercises beforehand). He then included
200 mg of Celebrex along with the PT. I can’t really say if the Celebrex helped
my hip but I did notice that it eliminated my occasional back pain! After a few
months with no improvement and actually some worsening of pain, the Ortho Doc
recommended a Total Hip Replacement. Since I was familiar with the Hip
Resurfacing technique (from a friend who had fantastic success with a bilateral
BHR by Dr. DeSmet several years ago in Belgium, and who turned me on to this
website), I asked him whether the procedure could be a fit for me. His response
was completely negative, to put it nicely. He had no faith in the procedure and
I immediately lost faith in him! My search for a resurfacing Doc was on – I
wanted someone who was an advocate of the procedure.
I went to see Dr. Mont in
Baltimore since he has done well over a thousand of these surgeries, is
well-liked by his patients, and is an active contributor to this website. The
consultation with Dr. Mont went very well and he was gracious and open – he even
gave me his home phone number if I had any burning questions. He thought I’d be
an excellent candidate for a BHR. The only issue was that my current Health
care plan in work is Keystone Health Plan East and Dr. Mont does not participate
in that network. If I wanted Dr. Mont to do the surgery I would have to wait
several months until I could change my coverage. I decided not to wait and to
try to find a more local surgeon that participates in the KHP-East network. I
used this website and found Dr. William Hozack of the Rothman Institute. I
posted an inquiry about Dr. Hozack on this website and was able to communicate
with a recent patient of his (thanks Brian!) who helped me decide to move
forward. I decided to have a consultation visit with Dr. Hozack.
Dr. Hozack does a wide range
of surgeries and appears to do many more total hips than resurfacings. My
impression is that he is more discriminating than some other resurfacing Docs in
that he seems to limit the resurfacing candidates to males between 50 and 55
years old (just my impression). He is very busy but took an extra amount of
time with me and answered all the questions that I brought to him – he actually
sat down with the list I printed-out from this website and wrote-in his
answers. I was very impressed with both him and his staff – a very
professional, well-run organization. I subsequently found out that several
professional sports teams use the Rothman Institute, including the Philadelphia
Eagles. Every person I talked to about Dr. Hozack, both his current patients
and all staff at both Rothman and Nazareth Hospital (where the surgery was
performed), gave him their highest recommendation. I was won over and decided
to schedule my surgery as soon as possible.
After being cleared by all the
pre-op testing (cardiology, nuclear stress test, etc.) and having set aside a
pint of blood with the Red Cross, my surgery was conducted on a Tuesday
morning. Doc thought the surgery itself would take ~ 1 hour. (I still don’t
exactly know how long it actually took but I’ll find out soon at my
1-month follow-up visit). The anesthesia used was a spinal block (not bad at
all – a very fine needle), and a sedative (a morphine-based mixture). I did not
wake up at all during the surgery (which I’m told can happen sometimes). I woke
up in post-op and my wife and daughter visited briefly. Dr. Hozack had
telephoned my wife and explained that everything went smoothly. The incision is
8” long and was closed with 40 staples. Dr. Hozack uses the posterior-lateral
approach.
Day 0 - I was brought to
my room later that afternoon and was still feeling the effects of the anesthesia
– a little bit nauseated but not too bad. I asked for a basin just in case and
they gave me something for the nausea. They had me do some mild PT (ankle
pumps, etc.) that evening and got me out of bed to sit in a chair. I also
walked the hallway with the aid of a walker.
Day 1 - The next morning
they had me up and sitting in a chair but my blood pressure dropped too low
(70/40) and I got dizzy (evidently a normal thing). They got me back into bed
and increased fluids by IV, which stabilized the BP just fine. The catheter was
removed, which was painful but over in a matter of seconds. I went to two
sessions of PT on a different floor of the hospital that day. The morning
session involved exercises while the afternoon session focused on walking and
climbing stairs (with crutches). My post surgery appetite was great and all
food tasted fantastic – I must have needed the energy for healing!
Day 2 – Went to PT in
the morning and walked the hallways using crutches, climbed up and down stairs
with the aid of a crutch, did some PT exercises, and learned to use some of the
assistive devices (sock putter-onner, etc.). Only problem I had was with the
tape used in bandaging – I developed some blisters from the tape. I would
recommend using paper tape, which is not as aggressive and does not leave a
residue. To help remove tape and also remove adhesive residue, a product from
Smith&Nephew called Uni-Solve wipes (#402300) was recommended to us and worked
great. To heal the blisters the hospital gave us a product called Xenaderm
ointment, which also worked great. I was discharged that afternoon and my wife
drove me the 1.5 hr trip home. I was fairly comfortable but was ready to get
out of the car after that drive. The hip stiffens-up pretty good during
extended periods of sitting.
During week 1 – I woke
up often at night during the first few nights at home and sleeping was difficult
due to limited positions to sleep in (I am used to sleeping on my right
(operated) side). I also had some very severe headaches, mostly at night. I
don’t know what caused the headaches but staying hydrated and using Tylenol
helped. Although I was discharged with Oxycodone for pain, I only took a few of
them since I did not like the reaction I experienced (intense, disturbing
dreams). I relied on Tylenol for pain, although most of the pain was related to
specific movements and there was not much pain when sitting still. The first
week was really great since improvements in movement came very fast. I did not
have a lot of swelling but did have bruising as far down as my calf – almost to
the ankle. Continued to eat like a horse and slept off and on throughout the
days. I was watching for signs of infection and did notice that my temperature
would rise, especially at night - maximum temperature was a little over 100°. I
also had a couple occasions of night sweats. All this calmed-down with time and
no infections occurred. I am walking fairly good distances with two and
occasionally one crutch but notice that a sharp, fleeting pain in the groin or
front of the thigh tells me I’ve done too much.
During week 2 – Swelling
is down quite a bit and the pain I have now feels like muscle pain. Quads are
very tight, hamstrings OK. Glutes are lousy and weak – glute squeezes are very
difficult but improving every day. Some PT exercises were impossible to do at
first (hip abduction, for example) but are improving quickly. I started walking
with one crutch and by the end of week two I am just using a cane. The staples
were removed at the end of week two and the leg feels better although it still
feels like I am laying on a thick rope if I lay on the operated side. Steri-strips
replaced the staples to lend some support for the incision, which is healing
nicely.
During week 3 – I went
back to work at the beginning of week three, exactly 14 days after surgery and
the day after the staples were removed. Although I am in the field about 50% of
my time and still am not cleared to drive, I can spend the first couple weeks
back doing desk work and only go out in the field in the company of a coworker,
who drives. My greatest concern with starting back to work was staying awake
all day and having enough food with me to make it through the day! I was very
tired at the end of the first few days back to work and was really ready to get
home in the late afternoon. I am mostly walking with a cane, although I can do
short stints without assistance if I concentrate on not limping. I do notice a
“clunking” or “clicking” in the hip joint but no pain is associated with it and
I understand this is normal and will subside with time.
During week 4 – At the
beginning of week four I am now walking almost entirely on my own with no
assistive device but still keep the cane handy just in case. I can do a mile
unassisted but have to watch about over-doing it – the leg lets me know. I am
also doing some work around the house without much difficulty. The steri-strips
have all come off and the incision looks good. Post-op medications continue to
include 200 mg Celebrex, a multivitamin, two iron gluconate supplements, two 325
mg buffered aspirins for blood thinning, and Tylenol if needed for pain.
1 Month post-op meeting
– Today I met with Dr. Hozack and his exceptional assistant Amy Lewis at my
1-month post-op meeting. X-Rays were taken and showed the device to be well
placed. My range-of-motion and muscle strength were determined to be fine, all
medications can now be stopped, and I was cleared to drive. Dr. Hozack stated
that I could continue with outpatient PT if desired, or could simply do the
appropriate exercises at home. I have no restrictions as far as range of motion
but was warned against doing any impact exercises or sports for the next six
months to guard against potential fractures. They also recommended using a
vitamin E lotion and massaging the incision to help break down the internal
sutures and scar tissue. I don’t need to follow-up with Dr. Hozack for another
six months, at which point X-Rays will again be reviewed.
I had an excellent experience
with Dr. Hozack and his team at the Rothman Institute and Nazareth Hospital and
would give them my highest recommendation! |