I think that from all the posts I've read that perhaps you have to look into your lifestyle from before you had a bad hip and see if something in the past has not created added problems when having a hip operation.
The reason I say this is that after being off my new hip left leg for a couple of months my right knee decided to give me pain and a little bit of loose cartlidge, its not really bad but uncomfortable to walk a lot. I spent a working life stepping in and out of a van as a mail collector and did this stepping out dozens of times a day. Also the job involved a great deal of lifting and a great deal of arms above the shoulder tipping of mail bags.
Consequently I have some bad arthritis in my neck shoulders upper region and some times down both the outsides of my arms almost to the point where the first time it happened, riding a bike, I thought I was having a heart attack, it is a long time ago , so I had all that tested.I was OK it was the mechanics of my body, from all the lifting , I also did lots of bending for work and have got a lower back pain too .
The point I'm trying to make to others who have post hip replacement pain, on going, is that it may also be other things, worn or injured over the course of your working life or sports injury, or, for the
US Army soldier who's post I read , it may be due to service sir. From the past.
I know my knee was already bad , I always had a bad lower back and our parcel /letter bag tipping was relentless, so my hip operation I think has simply allowed other parts of my body to carry the weight , now they are complaining to me ha ha . So perhaps the fear of botched operation can be let go , and also I think that total hip replacement takes a year or more of doing the right thing to heal it. Some people get back too quickly to their normal activities ,my surgeon made me wait almost three months before saying I could go off the double then single crutches that I used, his words were , it is better to walk well with help from crutches than to walk badly without crutches too early,because you may not get totally right.
But your body compensates and can create other things not directly related to the hip but from another weak point, I'll say, in your body.
I do know that my right knee will have to have something done to it soon. Hope you are all feeling better now, from Australia. Good luck.
pain in my quads but only when I walk. If I sleep or sit or even stand, I am
kind of fine. It's only the walking that makes for the pain. I had a posterior
hip replacement in 2006 and NEVER had a problem. Did you learn what is
causing this? I am having an MRI this friday since the X-rays are normal.
Roz
Dear Sue,
This post being over a year old, it's quite possible this reply will never be seen by you. If you are a veteran, then why not a va clinic somewhere? Boy, those doctors sure hacked you up and at such a young age. Anyways, am sorry. I am on this site looking for answer to my own hip pain. So far, some have quite useful replies. I have a vast magnitude of autoimmune diseases which were prior to my PHR of my right hip. I am no stranger to pain. I've always thought surgeries, broken bones - well, they mend. Diseases never mend and the pain seems different. In regards to myself, my neurologist seems to think it is nerve pain. With me it's sitting, travelling.,, just the vibrations and riding in a vehicle brings on moderate to severe pain. I hope you have been to a lawyer and see about Social Security (SSI or SSDI). Certainly the payments are paltry pennies in comparison to the life we had when working but let there be "Ramen Noodles!" I hope this find your health better and may You and Your's have a Merry Christmas and a Happier New Year.
Always
Pam
ia is a sleep disorder, the cells of the body repair themselves when we sleep. People with fibromyalgia don't fall into deep sleep so the cells don't repair and cause pain in the joints and muscles. The condition can be brought on by a trauma, physical or emotional also by a severe viral infection. It is a very difficult condition to diagnose. There is a medication called amytryptaline that allows the brain to fall into deep sleep. It MIGHT be this, you could ask your doctor about it. Good luck. It took me 2 years to finally get the diagnosis of this condition, I could hardly walk and felt as if I had the flu. After 3 weeks of meds. I was back to being my super fit healthy self.
Does anyone have any ideas?