Anterior Hip Replacement Approach
Cross-source consensus on Anterior Hip Replacement Approach from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
Uses
How it works
Risks & contraindications
Comparisons
Evidence quality
Highlighted claims
- Early after an anterior approach, extreme hip extension, external rotation, and abduction should be avoided. — Zone of Apposition, Total Hip Replacement Rehab, and Client Buy-In
- These anterior-approach positions can encourage the femur to glide anteriorly out of the socket. — Zone of Apposition, Total Hip Replacement Rehab, and Client Buy-In
- Hip extension after an anterior approach can use hamstrings and glutes if end-range extension is not forced too early. — Zone of Apposition, Total Hip Replacement Rehab, and Client Buy-In
- Reaching neutral hip extension safely is a meaningful early milestone after anterior hip replacement. — Zone of Apposition, Total Hip Replacement Rehab, and Client Buy-In
- The article prefers the anterior approach based on a cited meta-analysis comparing anterior and posterior approaches. — Zone of Apposition, Total Hip Replacement Rehab, and Client Buy-In
- The anterior approach is described as cutting through less tissue and appearing to produce better outcomes in the cited evidence. — Zone of Apposition, Total Hip Replacement Rehab, and Client Buy-In