GROIN PAIN AFTER Total Hip Replacement- Hip Tightness after THR

Posted , 69 users are following.

IMHO this happens far more often than is recognized by the doctors and physical therapists. If you have groin pain after a THR investigate if it is your psoas muscle and Iliopsoas Tendinitis. Your physical therapist should be able to easily find your psoas muscle and push down and you will recognize that is where the pain is coming from.

AFTER TWO WEEKS- If you CAN do this,

Lay flat on your back on the bed with your shoes off

Keeping your heel in contact with the bed, bend your knee and drag your foot up towards your butt

But CAN'T do this

Lay flat on the bed with your shoes off

Keeping your leg straight (don't bend the knee)

Raise your foot up off the mattress (you are using your hip muscles for this)

AND your groin hurts like HELL in certain situations, but not all situations, you probably have iliopsoas tendonitis.

You need to pay attention and be VERY careful. Think of tendonitis as little small rips into the tendon. What you need to do is rest the tendon and don't do anything to make the tears bigger (deeper). You want to not aggravate it, let it rest and let those little rips heal up.

Most people think that they simply need to exercize or stretch more, and in fact this is the opposite of what you should do, doing that only makes it worse and can result in a permenet condition as scar tissue will form over the rips.  Trust me on this I had tendonitis in my IT Band that I ignored, kept on working, that tuned into a perment condition (Tendonosis). It actually disabled me, so I am rather an expert on Tendonitis.

During your hip replacement they have to manipulate your leg and move it into positions it is not used to, this can pull that psoas muscle/tendon. OR your prosthesis is to big, or placed wrong and you will have this conditon until they go in and fix that.

Since I previously had Tendonosis I recognized the pain and symptons immediately. It was confirmed by my physical therapist. What I did was not exercize at all for 3 - 4 weeks. That is the amount of time it took for that iliopsoas tendonitis to heal back up. Only after that was healed up did I take up exercizing again, my physical therapist simply gave me leg massages during this time.

I found I had to lay down on the sofa not sit in a chair, as sitting in a living room chair was just a bad position for that tendon, so I layed around until it healed. What was very odd is that sitting in the chair wasn't that much of a problem initially, but when I got up from the chair it hurt. The good news, it did heal up just fine and I have had no further issues with it.

Google -  iliopsoas tendonitis after hip replacement

There is one woman on here I was able to help. Her prosthesis was digging into the tendon, her doctors did a surgery and did something (not sure what) and that fixed it. I know she did not have to have her prosthesis removed or changed out, instead they did something with the tendon instead.

Another woman I was able to help, she was doing great after her THR, about a month/ 5 weeks after her THR she was stepping off a pier to get into a boat and that is where she injured her iliopsoas tendonitis. Of course she was "stretching" and exercizing thinking that would help, which it did not, she followed my advice, simply rested the tendon by not doing anything that aggravates it and in about 3 to 4 weeks she was fine also.

If you have pain in your groin it is either nerve damage or the iliopsoas tendonitis. Nerve damage will travel down to your foot, Iliopsoas Tendinitis will stay sore in your groin area.

I am not a big fan of rigerous exercize right after surgery anyway. Think about it, they cut off the top of your leg bone and shove a stick in it. It simply takes time for that stick to get knitted back into the leg bone. I was forced to not exercize because of the iliopsoas tendonitis and at 4 weeks I started. In a matter of one week I went from using a walker/trolly to walking completely on my own with nothing. I just focused on keeping my back very straight and not bending over, in other words being very attentive to keeping good posture. I am more of a fan of , don't push yourself, let the bones heal up, when the bones are good and strong you will be able to get back into the swing of things very quickly. Good Luck to you.

----------------

Here is Shaye's reply to me---------------

Interesting that you say 'as sitting in a living room chair was just a bad position for that tendon' as I find sitting on an upright dining chair doesn't feel good after about 10 minutes. Driving is easier as I can tilt the seat back. In the article I read it said experiencing the pain getting out of a car was a sure sign this was the problem but so far I've only done the 'knees together and swivel' like we did when we wore mini skirts haha!! Next time I get in the car I'll try it the way I did it before I ever had a hipproblem.

Hi again Shayes

An update- I wentto my physio last week with info I'd printed off the internet re iliopsoas tendon weakness/inflammation. Now I know it's always difficult to see a 'medic' with info you've gleaned yourself but I've never been backwards in coming forwards - if you know what I mean! After a bit of discussion he got me on the couch and started prodding around the groin area - where I have most pain. he found a few very tender areas. he admitted it looked as if my iliac muscle was inflamed. One of the exercises he'd given me was all wrong for this and was making it worse!!!

He showed me how to massage it myself, which I've been doing for 5 minutes twice a day and it's soooo much better already.

According to the internet this is quite rare but it usually shows up later rather than sooner - I'm 15 weeks post op. However, when I talked to my brother about it he said he had the same thing 7 months post op!! One of the classic signs is pain getting into or out of a car- when you put one leg in/out first. I just can't do that, it's too painful.

And then my reply back-------

FWIW it will take about 3 to 4 weeks to have that Psoas muscle/tendons heal. IF after about 2 months it doesn't get any better you will most likely need a small surgery. I went from tendonitis to tendonosis (and you can look up tendonosis) of my IT band. Thankfully the THR totally fixed that, and that was a huge relief as my IT Band tendonosis caused me more pain than my bad hip. Please please take very good care of your psoas muscle so that it does nto beocme permenent. I didn't with my IT band and I suffered for 3 years, I was basically handicapped because of it.

My phyical therapist is the one who about 2 weeks in after my surgery told me it was my psoas muscle, he went and felt for it. He knew. When we had our THR they are moving that leg around in positions it never normally goes when they are dislocating the hip, this is what causes Iliopsoas Tendinitis. If you think of it this way it kind of makes sense doesn't it? Lay down rather than sit, lay around for a month and hope like Hell it heals.  If you have to get into and out of a car, wear pants and lift your leg by pulling up on your pants with your arms so as not to aggravate that muscle. Don't do anything that aggravates that muscle, pray that it heals. If after 2 months it never does heal go back to the orthopedic surgeon and ask for a small surgery to repair. Trust me you do NOT want to suffer with tendonosis all your life, it will handicap you. It is orthepedic surgeon who treat your tendons also. tendons and bones work together so that kind of makes sense to me.

5 likes, 106 replies

106 Replies

Prev Next
  • Posted

    hip I had a THR in October 2016 & thrilled w/results. 6 months later had the left done. Right hip has been awesome... Until recently. I have really bad groin pain! Was floored when I read your article! Getting in the car? Oh yes it hurt putting right leg in car! What am I to do? My husband is in a facility & I have to drive to see him. Suggestions please. Oh my chair of choice is a power recliner which I always put my feet up.

  • Posted

    Hi Jodi,I've had a long history of hip problems. Six operations later, I have a total hip replacement. I'm 33 and have a two year old so after a year and a half of having a pain free new hip, I went back to work and started riding a moped. 3 weeks into my new job, I get this agonising pain in my left buttock which felt like sciatica. I got this on and off for 2 days until I knelt down by my sons bed and was in so much pain that I couldn't move! Anyway long story short, I had pain at the front of my hip too, when I sneezed, coughed and getting out of bed and cars. I had to go into hospital because of the pain in my buttock and had a cortisone injection into the bursa at the front (which after a week of being pain free, the pain came back 100 times worse). I also had a scan that showed my tendon was rubbing on my cup. But my surgeon says he can't do anything surgical for me! Three months on from the first initial pain, I'm still housebound with my child and on strong doses of Targinact and Pregabalin. I'm still in far too much pain. I have a pain clinic appointment soon but I don't want to be on drugs, I was the tendon snip.

  • Posted

    I had hip resurfacing in July of  2014. All was good for a while then I developed a hair line fracture in the femor neck. It healed and all was fine. But then I started to get pain in my groin area and specifically the iliopsoas tendon. I tried physical therapy(dry needling) PRP and cortisone injections over the last 3 1/2 years. This past Easter I had a big flare up (inflammation) that put me on crutches for a week until I was able to get another cortisone injection. The tendon has since gotten better but still gives me pain if I increase activity by playing tennis or any kind of running.  

    My my doctor says the only way he can  fix my tendon issue is by converting my hip resurfacing to a total hip replacement. He says the resurpfacing cup is rubbing against the tendon and is causing the irritation. He said converting to total hip replacement would have smaller ball and he would debrie the tendon and lengthen the tendon to avoid the tendon from rubbing against the smaller cup. He said that should fix my problem. I have scheduled surgery for next month but I am having second thoughts.

    i would like to know if any one has had similar problem with hip resurfacing and the BHR implant cause Iliopsoas tendonitis. And, if converting to THR is the correct approach to fix the problem. My doctor says the only way he can treat the tendon is to convert to THR. Is that true?

  • Posted

    My hip replacement was five months ago without complication until I was standing at my kitchen sink and felt a “thump” and my leg gave way with excruciating pain in the hip area. ER x-rays confirmed implant position stable without any position change from post-op films. By the way, I’m a total joint implant sales rep with 36 years of experience and have been in the OR for over 300 hip replacements, so I know a lot about the subject.

    I was sent home from the ER with crutches and saw my surgeon the next day to confirm implant position, which hadn’t changed. I was on Aleve for inflammation and I iced the joint, though the pain seemed to be diffuse but clearly involved the medial goin area. What I experience in addition to what appears to be iliopsoas pain is pain in the joint area when I try to put weight on a straight leg, even though the implants appear stable. 

    I had an MRI that showed some soft tissue inflammation and edema, with what possibly looked like infection, but blood sedimentation test results came up negative for infection.

    What makes iliopsoas inpingement suspect is I can straight raise my leg without pain, and I can flex my knee and bring it to my chest without pain; however, there are positions both straight leg and with my knee bent that elicits a sharp pain in the area of the iliopsoas groin area, so it’s confusing to the surgeon. I can bend my knees together to rotate and lie on my left and right sides whithout pain when in bed, but separating my knees and doing this does elicit pain in the iliopsoas area.

    Has anyone ever had symptoms like mine and resolved the pain through rest when experiencing the pain both with movement and while standing with weight on the leg such that you can’t walk without crutches? 

    • Posted

      I felt the tendon ‘slip’ over the implant two days after surgery. No amount of resting has made any difference. The nett effect is that, although my legs measure as being the same length, the hip socket is not being held properly in place which ends up with me walking as if that leg is shorter and the knee developing valgus. No amount of hip strengthening exercise has made one jot of difference. I can’t walk from one end of a shopping mall to the other without this hip becoming sore in the groin and right around into the gluteus medius area.  You post doesn’t give me much hope that this can me resolved ....
    • Posted

      Rick, sorry about your pain post THR. Soft tissue problems are common following hip replacement. I had buttock pain and an inability to do the single leg balance on the surgical leg, for even one second, 5 months after my THR. It turned out that I had torn my gluteus medius and minimus tendons so badly that they couldn't heal on their own and I had surgical repair 15 months after THR. I had to go for a second opinion to a new orthopedic surgeon, one who was very experienced in soft tissue hip problems. My original surgeon didn't have a clue, and saw nothing wrong with my MARS MRI images. Second surgeon saw the problem right away from the MRI and from a physical exam, checking for strength and balance and range-of-motion in my leg/hip.

      A second opinion might be in order for you if you are getting no answers from your current physician. 

      You might find that if you posted your own discussion here on the forum that you would get more answers. Just go to the black "Start Your Own Discussion" box. Hope you can get a correct diagnosis and treatment plan that will get you on the right track to full recovery.

    • Posted

      Hi Annie, how did the medics discover the torn tendons? Xrays won't show them? Scan? MRI? Would love to know.

    • Posted

      Annie, it was shown through MARS MRI (Metal Artifact Reduction Sequence MRI). My original surgeon and radiologist saw nothing wrong. Second opinion surgeon looked at MARS MRI and immediately knew what was wrong. He suspected it from physical exam, which showed no ability to hold my body steady while on that leg, indicating torn gluteals, and confirmed it with MRI. I had Trendelenburg Gait as a result of the tears.
    • Posted

      Follow-Up: After consulting an orthopedic psoas expert who took an x-ray, it was obvious I had a displaced femur fracture and nothing like psoas impingement.. As a result, the pain I felt at the kitchen sink was clearly a femoral stress fracture. Standard of care advises if no fracture is obvious on immediate x-ray after an incident like mine to wait two weeks and take another x-ray. Apparently, a fracture line would have been obvious and I would have been given non-weight bearing for probably six weeks to three months. Instead, I returned to surgery where a periprosthetic plate was implanted, non-weight bearing for a month, then partial weight bearing for another month. A total screw up by my hip replacement surgeon.

    • Posted

      What a mess, Rick! Wish you had gotten that standard of care, as it would have saved you much time, trouble and pain.

  • Posted

    At my appointment in June I was told the X-ray showed more bone growth - apparently not good. Whether this is the cause of my groin pain I don't know but have to wait a year for another X-ray. Not ideal but don't know what else I can do. Never heard of this before. Has anyone else had experience or heard of this?

    • Posted

      You a growing girl! 😁 IBut if you’re inclined to boney spurs, I’d say that could happen? Are you taking magnesium caltrate? 

  • Posted

    Thanks for the info, WILL DISCUSS with PT. ANY ideas about the swollen leg?

Report or request deletion

Thanks for your help!

We want the community to be a useful resource for our users but it is important to remember that the community are not moderated or reviewed by doctors and so you should not rely on opinions or advice given by other users in respect of any healthcare matters. Always speak to your doctor before acting and in cases of emergency seek appropriate medical assistance immediately. Use of the community is subject to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy and steps will be taken to remove posts identified as being in breach of those terms.