Total Hip Replacement Rehabilitation
Cross-source consensus on Total Hip Replacement Rehabilitation from 1 sources and 7 claims.
1 sources · 7 claims
Uses
Risks & contraindications
Highlighted claims
- The major early rehabilitation concern is avoiding positions that could provoke dislocation. — Zone of Apposition, Total Hip Replacement Rehab, and Client Buy-In
- Total hip replacement rehabilitation should account for whether the procedure used an anterior or posterior approach. — Zone of Apposition, Total Hip Replacement Rehab, and Client Buy-In
- After precautions are addressed, hip extension, frontal-plane motion, and hip rotation should all be restored. — Zone of Apposition, Total Hip Replacement Rehab, and Client Buy-In
- Range selection and exercise choice must respect the surgical approach and healing stage. — Zone of Apposition, Total Hip Replacement Rehab, and Client Buy-In
- Hip rotation work should be directional and individualized to the motion deficit. — Zone of Apposition, Total Hip Replacement Rehab, and Client Buy-In
- Any total hip approach that disrupts tissue raises concern about how soon and aggressively tissues should be loaded. — Zone of Apposition, Total Hip Replacement Rehab, and Client Buy-In
- Frontal-plane motion should be addressed when abduction or adduction is limited. — Zone of Apposition, Total Hip Replacement Rehab, and Client Buy-In