Hip Arthroscopy Active life long Martial artist - Post surgery recovery feedback

eggy293

new member
Joined
Nov 10, 2024
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4
Age
38
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United States United States
Gender
Female
Hi everyone, 38 year old female and I had my first surgery April, 2023 in which it was diagnosis via 3 MRIs to be a right hip labrum tear. It took a while for us to get to surgery as the scans did not show it to be that big of a tear. After 6 months of PT and no progress pain wise I moved onto surgery. The surgeon found a massive bone spur which had caused the tear and was ripping up the joint. He remove the spur and put 2 anchors in the labrum to repair the tear. Fast forward 4 months and after completing PT and getting the green light to return to sport 100% I was doing good. Then after a week long stint of walking 20k+ steps a day in Europe it started to go down hill again. Range of motion had decreased and pain had returned 24/7.
Went back to the surgeon and got a steroid shot and MRI. The scan showed massive adhesions had formed over the repair. We then tried a PRP injection to bust up them up and it did not work. Therefore a 2nd surgery was scheduled and completed June 2024. This time around he removed all the adhesions and then shaved off the femur and hip bone due to ongoing impingement. This wasn’t done the first time around due to the finding of the bone spur and that likely being the cause of my pain. I am now 5 months post op from the 2nd surgery + 1 steroid injection and that deep hip soreness / pain has come back with activity. I just can’t seem to get past a certain level of activity (karate / running) without irritating it. PT is ongoing and am working on getting my glutes to fire properly it just seems never ending with so much effort being put in.
Curious to see if others have had the same type of recovery and have any pointers. I am a very active martial artist (3-4x) a week and it is killing me not able to do what I love.
 
Last edited:
Welcome to BoneSmart @eggy293 !

I empathize very much with you: I blew out my ACL in a martial arts accident (aikido) and had to stop a full year for surgery and rehab! I ended up devising lots of successful adaptations in training over the years as posttraumatic osteoarthritis set into the knee. Eventually worsening shoulder and thumb problems led me to bow off the mat permanently at age 61 (I do tai chi but it's just not the same!!!!)

At this point with your return of symptoms I think you have a few options:

Discuss with your provider new xrays specifically to assess for developing osteoarthritis plus scans to assess for tendon, ligament, and bursa problems.

Consider consulting a non surgeon specialist well versed in soft tissue injury and imbalance: a sports medicine doc or physiatrist (physical medicine doc), or a doctorate prepared physical therapist (they are better prepared to do complex assessment than a Masters prepared PT and while getting your glutes to fire properly is definitely a good thing it strikes me as possibly a too limited approach).

And please please cut back your training. In my 20+ years on the mat I watched too many peers and teachers have acute injuries turn into really bad chronic problems because they were too impatient to allow healing to complete.
 
Thank you @mendogal for your reply.

I have 100% cut back on my training, even though I may be going 3 times a week right now, 2 times for teaching and 1 time for class, it is very restricted. No kicking and limiting “impact” movements, therefore would say I am around 50% in class. The running is part of a return to run protocol per PT which is also restricted and I am up to about 25 total mins which includes a mixture of walking / running. My issue with both seems to be if I try to advance past what I have designed above the pain/soreness comes back. It usually goes away overnight but recently it has started to stick around longer which is why I am thinking the steroid shot wore off and this is just a normal “stage” in the recovery.

My PT is a PhD level graduate that also has her ortho specialty certification. I have confidence in her and her program but just keep getting told patience and time is what is still needed. My next follow up with my surgeon is early next month so just waiting to see his thoughts. Last time he told me to set expectations to more around a 8 month post op recovery.
 
What is the exact date of your June surgery? We need the date to be able to correctly add you to the appropriate Monthly Team Thread
 
Hi,
1st surgery: April 10th, 2023
2nd surgery: June 10th, 2024
 
@eggy293 Thank you for taking the time to fill in details.
I'm glad you've got a good PT to collaborate with (I've always viewed my positive PT relationships as problem-solving partnerships), and relieved at your prudent current restrictions.
 
Welcome.
Not much to add except you may want to dial back some of the activity seeing you had two surgeries on same area. Many of us that had hip replaced took longer to recover than expected.
 
Thank you everyone for your feedback. Its been a struggle coming to terms with the whole "slow and steady" / "activity level is based on stopping before it gets sore". Since I do contact / high impact activities it just makes it seems even slower since it will take a longer time to get back to those.
My glutes finally started waking up this week in PT, very targeted exercises which are mentally very challenging and it shows the right side is so weak compared to the the left. I'll take that as progress and keep moving forward. I will be dropping down to 1x/week for PT and then more ownership on me for exercise and progressing through the "Return to run" program.
Any additional advice is always welcome as I keep moving forward through this recovery.
 
I hope you'll share both your milestones, large and small, as well as any concerns that arise. We're here for all of it!
 
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