Hip Replacement Improves Quality of Life
Paul Tubinis, who turned 50 this year, is a lifelong athlete.
He played baseball and basketball in high school and college.
As an adult, he was a runner, played tennis and golf, and participated
in other active sports.
Then years of wear on his joints caught up with him. “I developed
an arthritic hip, and moving it became painful,” he said. “[For
example,] when I went to Tiger football games, I had trouble
climbing the steps in the stadium. So, it wasn’t just that I
couldn’t be the athlete I once was. My quality of life in general
was less.”
Like many of today’s adults who actively seek to learn more
about their health, Paul began to read about hip replacement
surgery and talk with people who had undergone surgery. Finally,
he contacted Dr. John Crockarell at the Campbell Clinic. Paul
and Dr. Crockarell decided to move forward with surgery to replace
Paul’s hip.
After his surgery on July 1, 2004, Paul Tubinis spent two nights
in the hospital. “But they had me up and walking around with
a walker on the day of the operation,” he said. “I’m not saying
that it wasn’t painful, but I was just amazed that I was home
on the third day after what certainly qualifies as major surgery.”
Paul said he was making phone calls and using his computer the
day he returned home from the hospital. “A physical therapist
came to my home for five sessions, and I was able to get out
of the bed by myself on the tenth day,” he said. “At the end
of four weeks, when I visited Dr. Crockarell’s office, I was
able to walk out without using my walker.”
Six months after his surgery, Paul Tubinis says his life has
improved. “I’m playing golf again,” he said. “I’m watching my
diet, and I’m able to do more repetitions in my exercise routine
than I could prior to surgery. I feel great. It’s just a miracle.”
(Text courtesy of Campbell Foundation)
FACTS: Hip Replacement
- The first hip replacement was performed in 1960. Today,
approximately 220,000 total hip replacement surgeries are
performed annually in the U.S.
- The most common diagnoses for hip replacement patients
are osteoarthritis, degenerative joint disease, and related
disorders.
- The average age of a hip replacement patient is 68 years.
- The average length of stay in the hospital is three to
five days.
(Source: DePuy Orthopaedics)