Gerard2018
new member
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2022
- Messages
- 4
- Age
- 43
- Gender
- Male
- Country
-
United States
I was first diagnosed with end stage hip OA in late 2017 and told that not only to stop my running and heavy weightlifting, but also that those activities are not for those who have a hip replacement( I have since learned the may not really be the case).
I tried other activities, and nothing really got me interested, so I really stopped exercising. At this time, I also meant my soon-to-be wife, who was a pastry chef, who loved to cook big meals, like her Italian grandmother, and make sure her husband is well cared and shown love by making sure that he is well fed, like her Alabama up bringing told her to.
Needless to say I got fat. Very fat, at 5’9, and 403 lbs, with much of the 225 pounds gained since 2020, the year where I felt like some character from a Ronald Dahl story being fatten’d up on purpose with the way my wife went mad in the kitchen when she lost her job, and she decided to stay home and make me the sole customer of he baked goods lol.
As this is the last year at my current job, which has very good health insurance, I have been thinking about having my hip done, even though I can still walk two miles a day, albeit it with some pain, but nothing that is too unbearable. In fact, even though I have gained all this weight, my pain level is much, much better than when I was crazy active. And all my blood work is fine, hr and bp are fine, which I think is because I am still walking.
But I have been told by surgeons that just being big makes it hard to place the hip in there. Is that true?
I was also told that I am at a greater risk of infection due to my obesity. But even if that is the case, then since elderly people are at greater risk of infection too, we should no longer do it on anyone over 65. It does not make sense.
I tried other activities, and nothing really got me interested, so I really stopped exercising. At this time, I also meant my soon-to-be wife, who was a pastry chef, who loved to cook big meals, like her Italian grandmother, and make sure her husband is well cared and shown love by making sure that he is well fed, like her Alabama up bringing told her to.
Needless to say I got fat. Very fat, at 5’9, and 403 lbs, with much of the 225 pounds gained since 2020, the year where I felt like some character from a Ronald Dahl story being fatten’d up on purpose with the way my wife went mad in the kitchen when she lost her job, and she decided to stay home and make me the sole customer of he baked goods lol.
As this is the last year at my current job, which has very good health insurance, I have been thinking about having my hip done, even though I can still walk two miles a day, albeit it with some pain, but nothing that is too unbearable. In fact, even though I have gained all this weight, my pain level is much, much better than when I was crazy active. And all my blood work is fine, hr and bp are fine, which I think is because I am still walking.
But I have been told by surgeons that just being big makes it hard to place the hip in there. Is that true?
I was also told that I am at a greater risk of infection due to my obesity. But even if that is the case, then since elderly people are at greater risk of infection too, we should no longer do it on anyone over 65. It does not make sense.