By Linda
Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- If you can stand the pain before seeing a surgeon,
you don't need a hip replacement. Although
vast improvements have been made in joint replacements in
the last 20 years, nothing a doctor does will last as long
or as well as the original joint. Dr.
Rusty Linton, orthopaedic surgeon in Columbus, said if
performed on a person meeting the ideal criteria, replacing
a hip can be like getting a new life. "First
surgeries have a 95 to 97 percent success rate that notable
improvement will occur," Linton said. "Unfortunately, those
replacements will not last as long as the original -- maybe
20 years at best. The success rate of second surgeries, or
revisions, is around 80 percent." Dr.
Thomas Turner of Berwin Veterinary Associates near Chicago,
said animal research such as that taking place at
Mississippi State University's College of Veterinary
Medicine, is giving crippled people and animals a shot at
better artificial hips. Turner,
an internationally-known expert on joint replacements in
humans and animals, said the complications doctors see with
animal hip replacements are similar to those suffered by
humans. "Animals
put a lot more wear and tear on hips than people do," Turner
said. Linton
said when natural hips are bruised, they heal. When the
material is manmade, it cannot heal itself. "When we
perform a first surgery -- which is elective -- we burn
bridges. There will be no going back. If that person is
going to have a hip joint, it will be an artificial one,"
Linton said. "It is so important to get it right the first
time. You don't want to go back into that hip." Linton
also stressed the importance of patients meeting ideal
criteria before attempting a replacement. Negatives
include being too young and being overweight. "Since
the hips won't last long and second surgeries are
undesirable, it is best that people seek alternatives to the
surgery first," he said. "Alternatives include losing
weight, reducing stressful activities and using a
cane." Linton
said he encourages patients to wait as long as possible
before having the surgery. "This is
a procedure for crippled people, not just people in pain,"
Linton said. "It's for people who can't get up and go to the
bathroom without help; then after the surgery, many can walk
around without pain." Ray
Watson, a biology professor at MSU, knows what it means to
live with hip pain and to feel relief after the surgery. He
began to experience pain when he was in his 40s. "I could
barely walk, barely sleep. The pain was starting to
interfere with my work. Even with a cane, I could barely
handle outdoor class labs," Watson said. Watson's
first hip was replaced in 1981 and the second in 1992. Now,
the time is approaching when the first will need to be
revised. "If
people experience the pain like I have, they will recognize
the value of hip research," he said. Released:
April 14, 1997
Animal
Health
Hip Surgery May
Offer New Life
Contact: Dr. Rusty Linton, (601) 328-1012
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:30:08
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