Anterior hip replacement is a common type of total hip replacement.
Anterior hip replacement complications.
The anterior approach through the front of the hip has been utilized as long as the posterior approach but its popularity has grown in the us over the past 10 15 years.
Total hip replacement with anterior approach refers to surgeries done from in front of the hip.
However there is significant controversy over the optimal muscle sparing approach.
It replaces your hip joint with an artificial one.
The most commonly utilized total hip replacement is the posterior approach through the back of the hip which has been performed successfully for decades.
Complications after a total hip replacement aren t common but they can happen.
In addition many surgeons are advocating for the use of anterior hip replacement surgery approached from the front of the hip joint to maintain the ligament structure that holds the joint together.
Mini posterior approach mpa or direct anterior approach daa.
Research suggests that people who undergo anterior hip replacement may be more likely to have a problem with wound healing particularly infection.
A total hip replacement is a type of surgery.
One specific complication is an injury to a large skin nerve just adjacent to the incision of the anterior approach hip replacement.
Conditions that can damage the hip joint sometimes making hip replacement surgery necessary include.
During surgery your doctor makes an incision in the front of your hip to reach the hip joint.
These surgeries may also be called mini modified minimally invasive or muscle sparing surgeries.
However it was the introduction of new instrumentation allowing it to be performed using smaller incisions that has increasingly made it a viable alternative to the more popular posterior approach.
Then they replace the joint with.
The anterior approach sometimes called the mini anterior approach or muscle sparing hip replacement has been used to some degree since the 1980s.
According to the aaos fewer than 2 percent of patients have a serious complication such as a joint infection.
Fortunately this complication has become less common in recent years as the design and materials used in hip prostheses continue to improve.
For example a study of 505 anterior hip replacements and 1288 posterior hip replacements found that 7 1 4 of the anterior hip patients had wound healing problems compared to 5 0 2 of the.