Your doctor may refer you to a physical therapist to treat your hip pain. A physical therapist is trained to help improve your ability to do the activities you want.
This may mean returning to golf or tennis, being able to work again, continuing to garden, or simply taking care of yourself around your home.
Physical therapy can help treat:
It can also help you prepare for, or recover after, hip replacement surgery.
The goal is for you to function as well as possible with little or no pain. To do this, your physical therapist will:
There are many exercises, stretches, and other methods to treat hip pain and arthritis. Each physical therapist or trainer may choose a different set of exercises or treatments to help you.
Your doctor or orthopedic surgeon should direct or prescribe these treatments.
There is no perfect exercise or technique. The treatment and coaching you receive can help you manage your pain and decrease your risk for further injuries to your hip.
Before treating you, a therapist will assess your body mechanics. The therapist will:
Many muscles surround your hip and lower back. Some of them are among the strongest in your body.
When all of these muscles are working well together, they serve to stabilize your hip joint. When your hip is stabilized, less stress is placed on your hip joint and muscles when you are active. A lot of focus will also be on your core stability. Strong core support can have less stress on your hip and lower extremity joints.
After testing and examining you, your therapist will know which muscles are too weak or too tight. You will then start a program to stretch out your muscles and make them stronger. Most of the time you do not need to use heavy weights for these exercises.
Deep tissue work or massage may be done by a massage therapist or a physical therapist. This technique is different from the type of massage that can help you relax.
The goal of this therapy is to break up micro-scars that can form in the muscles, tendons, and other tissues that have been sore or tight for a long time. These symptoms may be caused by hip arthritis or sprains and strains of the muscles and ligaments around your hip.
During the treatment:
Right afterwards, you may feel pain or stiffness in the muscles that were worked on. Try placing ice on the area. The discomfort should go way in 1 or 2 days.
Ultrasound is most often used to treat bursitis, sprains, and strains around the hip.
The ultrasound machine creates high-frequency sound waves. A probe attached to the machine carries these waves to your body tissues.
Your therapist can also do other treatments with ultrasound. Most of the time, your therapist will use ultrasound before stretching a muscle, tendons, or ligament, or before you perform some exercises.
The treatments help draw blood into the area and can help with the healing process.
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