šŸ“” Update: "Coach Saban underwent successful robotic assisted right hip replacement surgery"

After having both knees replaced within 5 months.....at 65 years old.... I am amazed at the problems I am hearing other people had. I climbed stairs the day after and was walking normally within 3 weeks of rehab....which I worked my butt off in. Maybe you need to come to Elite Sports in Nashville to get knees done.
 
After having both knees replaced within 5 months.....at 65 years old.... I am amazed at the problems I am hearing other people had. I climbed stairs the day after and was walking normally within 3 weeks of rehab....which I worked my butt off in. Maybe you need to come to Elite Sports in Nashville to get knees done.

Most of how well someone does with either a knee or hip replacement, depends on how hard they work in rehab after. So I think Saban should be OK on that front.

My oldest has a slight hip labrum tear, they told her it would be 5-6 month recovery, 1-2 months of crutches with no activity.

Muscle and ligament tears are so much more involved than actual joint replacement. A lot more healing to do.
 
Most of how well someone does with either a knee or hip replacement, depends on how hard they work in rehab after

But a hip replacement, according to that article above, only taking as little as 3-4 weeks before he's walking around fairly normal again? That's crazy.

As I've been reading about the surgery over the last few days I've learned there's more than one way to do the procedule: anterior and posterior. It's my understanding Saban is having the anterior procedure Monday and I've read accounts with people having the same and walking without pain in a matter of a few days...the majority mention walking on day one. The posterior method leads to a much longer recovery period.
 
As I've been reading about the surgery over the last few days I've learned there's more than one way to do the procedule: anterior and posterior. It's my understanding Saban is having the anterior procedure Monday and I've read accounts with people having the same and walking without pain in a matter of a few days...the majority mention walking on day one. The posterior method leads to a much longer recovery period.
Because to do it via posterior, they have to go through the glutes, which adds to the healing time. Going in through the front, very little muscle disruption.
 
Perhaps I misread the articles that left me with the impression the biggest difference was going through the muscle versus removing and reattaching the muscles. Dunno. šŸ¤·ā€ā™‚ļø @rammerjammer
That is the thing. In the front, the muscle fibers run in one direction, top to bottom, so they can separate them and do their work,then naturally let them close back up around it after the surgery. In the glutes, you have multiple layers, one layer goes side to side, the layer underneath goes up and down. That means the top layer must be detached and then sewn back in place, so that needs to mend before you do anything that might rip it back open.

Of course, all of this is not from someone who has studied orthopedic surgery, just someone who recalls the actual anatomy of the body, from when I briefly thought about becoming a Dr.
 
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