What was the favorite piece of wisdom that Tommy shared? Drop a comment below! 👉 Get Healthy Hips even with Hip Impingement! uprighthealth.com/fai 👉 Fix Your Hips with Healthy Hips: uprighthealth.com/healthy-hips
Just been diagnosed with this after months of pain and lack of sleep..been offered an operation,which I was mortified about..I'm a tramper/cycling..thought an operation was the only scary option...have started doing exercises for this problem,no pain killers or anti inflammation tabs...cold baths everyday/magnesium/ and I'm watching suggestions thru thw university of RUclips.. Everyone has told me without an operation I will need a hip replacement sooner...thanks from nz
Thanks so much Upright Health and Tommy for this eye-opening story. I was also a competitive surfer, in Hawaii and super active my entire life. Hiking, climbing, bike riding, skydiving, the whole bit. My first real bad injury from surfing was my shoulder. I woke up with my right arm stuck behind my head and could not lower it. It was just stuck. No event led to this happening, I had no wipeout or accident. Some wipeouts you hit the reef and get banged up but that heals. Cuts and scrapes heal. I called into work with my left hand explaining that my right arm is stuck over my head and I can’t lower it. Extreme pain even trying. “What happened?!” Was the question, and I had no answer. “It happened while I was asleep. I just woke up this way and I’m going to the doctor.” I eventually pulled my arm from behind my head and screamed like a little girl as I did so. Most pain I’ve ever felt but I wasn’t going to see the doctor or walk anywhere in public with my arm stuck behind my head. At the doctor’s office he immediately recognized me as a surfer and knew the problem. “It’s common among surfers and from paddling. Repetitious movement of the joints.” Okay, he’s right about that, I surf before and after work and all weekend long. I spend more hours in the ocean than I do on land. I have contests to surf and I have to be at my best at all times. So the doctor gave me a cortisone shot in the shoulder and a rubber band thing to tie to a doorknob or something and do these exercises every day. The cortisone worked and I felt no pain, so I didn’t do the exercises. I was young. 26 or so. The surf was up and I woke up with the same problem the next morning. The doctor was a sports medicine doctor and physical therapist. I walked back into his office like a kid who stole the cookies from a cookie jar. Guilty. I didn’t listen to him. He told me no surfing for 30 days and I only waited two days. He told me (and this time I was listening), “One more cortisone shot and that’s it. If you don’t do your exercises, as boring and ineffective they may seem, surgery is next and good luck with that.” What an excellent doctor. He scared the crap out of me! I did what he ordered me to do and my shoulder has been fine ever since. I quit surfing competitively and just free-surfed on occasion. Can’t throw a fastball, that would be bad, but my shoulder doesn’t hurt at all. It’s fine. I know my limits. Fast-forward, now I’m 60 years old. Been doing everything all these years with no problems, no pain, riding my bike, hiking for miles, and all of a sudden it’s my hips. Happened in one day. I was fine the day before and today I’m in extreme pain and can’t walk. Can’t even think about riding my bike. Can’t lift my leg over the top bar so I laid the bike way over on its side because this is ridiculous! How did I go from perfectly fine and pain-free, to crippled in one day? I’m riding but I’m afraid my hips won’t let me deal with an emergency like skidding to a red light in time. Or, even stopping and perching on one leg. Something terrible is going on and again, it was out of the blue. Went to the doctor. Not my old great doctor in Hawaii, but an orthopedic surgeon in Seattle. He took ex-rays and whatever and immediately recommended a double hip replacement. “Ummm….aren’t there a few things I could do before it comes to cutting off both my legs and re-installing them with screws and titanium and Teflon?” He’s like, “Your hip cartilage is really worn out. Surgery is really your best bet.” I went home and did lots of research online. Turns out, most active 60 year olds have hip cartilage that looks exactly like mine and they have no hip pain at all, so it’s something else. Surgeons want to do surgery and they don’t give a rat’s ass if it solves the problem or not. It’s a ton of money for them, while the unwitting patient goes completely broke and homeless, crippled for life. The doctor has a new Lamborghini and his patient is on the streets still in pain, digging through the garbage for food. That’s the scenario I envisioned and so I looked for a different doctor. But he said the same thing. Surgery. That’s when I found a whole lot of people on the internet saying, “Don’t do the surgery!” And here on Upright Health, I’m always thinking muscles. Because that’s where the pain is, it’s not in the joint itself. I have the popping and cracking thing going on but it’s in the muscles, tendons, ligaments, that connect to the joint. And I had to think back to how I could have atrophied these things while always being so active? The “worn-out” cartilage theory I don’t buy, since everyone my age has worn out cartilage and most in no pain at all. Lots of variables could have led to my current condition of constant hip pain. My diet hasn’t changed much since I was a kid, mostly protein and no fast foods, the only thing that has changed really was my misdiagnosis of Graves’ disease and the prescription of Methimazole. So I looked that up. It’s bad stuff and I took it daily for a year. Side effects include “Sudden and severe arthritis.” But only on rare occasions. Hmmm. I’m kinda rare, that doesn’t mean impossible? The studies on methimazole were spooky. It’s still on the market and has been renamed, but it’s the same chemical. I’ve been off it for a year and the damage is already done. I don’t have Graves’ disease and now I’m crippled from the supposed medicine. Doing my physical therapy in my apartment as Upright Health instructs but so far I haven’t seen a miraculous recovery. Well, there’s no such thing as that. It takes time, persistence, and not pushing your limits. I figure by the time I’m 70 I’ll have beat this pain and can finally retire, cruising the country in a camper van. I’ll definitely find my dream-girl my age on the road. Get married again. That’s my dream now. Hope it works out. That’s going to take a whole lot of work from me. Not sure I’m up for it but I’ll try. Thanks Upright Health for helping me understand what I need to do.
Had followed the FAI protocol for 12 years now, with daily practice. Had surgery on both hips in 2009, bone shave labral debridement and cartilage repair and micro fracture due to large flaps of cartilage falling out of the joint. I never recovered and have yet challenges walking, despite keeping up the work, stretches, strengthening and other modalities to get through the day. Best wishes to everyone out there facing the hip and back challenges, they can truly derail a life.
Of the hundreds of youtube channels I've watched videos from, yours is one of 4 that I'm subscribed to. That's how powerful your presentation/thinking is. I don't even suffer from hip pain, I just listen to you to learn how to think about the body correctly.
I’m 41 and have the hip arthroscopy in 2020 from laberal tears and FAI. I’m an athlete so movement is my life. I’ve been so disciplined for years now but hips both give me chronic pain. Hip Arthritis is no joke, I’m looking at hip resurfacing replacement now can’t continue living with this pain. What more can I do ? Thanks Matt and Tommy
Inspirational! This has come at exactly the right time for me. Started the hip programme a month or so back but just couldn’t get focus. I’m a 71 year old just retired Aussie bloke and embracing Oestio arthritis and the usual tear. Next week I was due to start three PRP injections through frustration. Now, cancelled the injections, joined the gym and now have a new game plan with getting my act together and committing. All from Tommy saying that he embraced and his understanding of the journey. It moved me so much Matt. Great video presentation and the location was perfect to hold the interview
Curious to know how you're doing and how sceptical your doctors are/were? I'm 58y, have three radically different interpretations of the same MRI/xrays, and a fourth being withheld until I pay the guy more money. One suggests I think about a replacement in the next year and says he has poor arthroscopy results with over 50s, another within 5-8y, a third would definitely consider arthroscopy but only after diagnostic injection of spinal/steroid (which I know is not always predictive). Physio suspects labral tear but no strengthening exercises given. Madness.
@@VickiMartin-v9c Thank you for asking where I'm at. Had a couple of lapses over that time. My biggest issue is reprogramming certain muscles to fire again. And then frustration raises its ugly head. I still believe I can beat this and get my life back to a better norm. I have surfing shots in the front of my diary which is my goal to get back on my board. My Physio recommended a great book if I may put it up to you. "Why does it still hurt" by Paul Biegler. He's a doctor who went through knee pain but in his journey he interviews all these other cases and different ways that people beat pain issues without surgery. Fantastic! I got it as an audio book and have been through it three times. Just hearing about people with major issues and their will power is very motivating. I hope you achieve a more focused direction for your issues in the near future. Regards woodie
BJJ and MMA And Muay Thai practitioner of 5 years. So grateful to see this video. I’ve always had some hip, si joint, low back, levoscoliosis issues. PT off and on all my life.. gets harder now that I’m approaching 50 with menopause! Sucks ! I’ve had to stop training to do PT for hip impingement as well. I steer clear or orthopedic doctors as I have consulted them all throughout my life. PT is a huge resource and asset in my life. It can really change things when you do as you’re told 100%. Oh and medical marijuana is a lifesaver for spasms and tension.. also keeping weight down, eating well, and proper self care are critical when dealing with ortho issues. I’m very interested in this healthy hips program.. I’ll try ANYTHING lol😂
Needed to listen to Tommy’s story for hope. I can agree that I need to stick to a plan. Currently on week 3 of Healthy Hips Program and notice how impatient I can be. I’m sticking to it and have faith it will help my hips - have osteoarthritis on left hip - deal with pain and I limp sometimes.
What Tommy has learned will serve him for the rest of his life, especially as an athlete! In a way, it might be a blessing that this crisis happened to him so young. "Atrophy aches" and "always think muscles" runs through my head whenever I have a pain now. It's a much more useful mindset to believe that we each have the power to fix our earthly vessel 😛 Instead of running to a doctor for an issue that we probably inflicted on ourselves, from poor motion or lack of motion. 2ish years ago I healed my bad hip with "youtube university" and some of your exercises...I then went from skinny fat couch potato to working at a warehouse, as a 115lb lady. The lifting dredged up an old shoulder injury, but applying "always think muscles", the tennis ball+wall thing and hanging from my pull up bar, it was fixed in 2-3 weeks. Now, I get to blow the minds of new starters with how much I can lift and throw, lol. It's all thanks to the mindset change you encourage.
@Uprighthealth I am exactly going through the same (FAI, degenerative and labrum tears). I am glad i came across your channel. beginning to some hope for good. Can I know how can i join your program please? do you have one on one session?
I'm already thousands into paying for physical therapy and haven't yet opted for the MRI to diagnose a labral tear. I'm really hoping your program can help. I totally feel like Tommy described--uncertain that I'll be able to do the things I enjoy doing
What exactly is the Healthy Hips program? I naturally easily do Asian squats, have been a life long daily runner & active person, have lower body strength, great agility, have no arthritis anywhere-but after being bed ridden for a time, now when I do my daily run, sometimes my hips hurt. Different shoes and shoe inserts do seem to make a difference but I’m not running 🏃♀️ regularly because I don’t think it’s a good idea if it causes pain. Is it just tight hips from being sedentary for a while? In the past, I have relieved it with great body workers using things like ART & scraping (Graston). Do I just need to stay on loosening the hips. I really miss running so much. It isn’t really painful but I think any pain is a sign something is misaligned.
Did I miss what he did to avoid the surgery? I heard a lot of mindset type story but not "I did program x daily and am great" or "my hips suck and I just mentally accept the pain".
very inspiring, I am considering surgery for a labral tear. I do not want surgery, also considering stem cells and rehab instead. what are your thoughts on stem cells? thank you so much
I want to know if it is worth it for me to do the program. I have protrusio deformity in both hips. I have a lateral pelvic tilt as well. I injured my self in pilates causing cracks in my cartilage in left hip along with a labral tear, i also have a stable labral tear in my right hip. I had to have surgery in left hip, they did open surgery where a surgical dislocation was done, inorder to do a trochanteric osteotomy as well as labral tear. They left 2 screws in. Post surgery i did not recover properly , i guess the screws were irritating me. Because the surgical hip never recovered, i ended up over compensating on the right side which led to really bad groin pain in the right hip, and bursitis . I got the screws removed in the left hip but im still struggling . Im in PT for both hips, but no matter what we do, my hips hurts, i am struggling to walk and am only 31. I kow protrusio/hip impingement/lateral pelvic tilt is extremely complicated but i want to avoid surgery again. Can i possibly try this program or not?
I’m wondering if dialysis related hip joint issues can be alleviated. Amyloid proteins accumulated from dialysis accumulates in the joints and causes damage. This is a common issue but isn’t being addressed because they feel there isn’t anything that can be done.
I'm 48. I have a cam deformity on the head of my right femur which has caused impingement, a labrum tear and the beginning of osteoarthritis. The NHS orthopaedic surgeon said he could operate and shave the bone to get rid of the cam deformity with about 50/50 chances of success.
Very nice of the surgeon to tell you it's only 50/50 chance of success. That means they're getting more honest about the actual success rates...which probably hover in the 20-30% range. ruclips.net/video/0qdkNGDUudg/видео.html
Never. Nobody can fix your hips but you. It can take a long time to restore and/or establish pain-free range of motion. For some it will take a long time. For some it will be short. Be patient and keep learning.
One truth that came out; surgery rarely ever puts anyone back to 100%. The ATM method goes back as far as our civilization has been civilized. Movement and using all of our muscles keep us moving forward.
Best comment was getting through the slack times when you're not seeing progress. Trust in the process. Say No or orange chicken (for me, the sofa), and get back to work.
What was the favorite piece of wisdom that Tommy shared? Drop a comment below!
👉 Get Healthy Hips even with Hip Impingement! uprighthealth.com/fai
👉 Fix Your Hips with Healthy Hips: uprighthealth.com/healthy-hips
Just been diagnosed with this after months of pain and lack of sleep..been offered an operation,which I was mortified about..I'm a tramper/cycling..thought an operation was the only scary option...have started doing exercises for this problem,no pain killers or anti inflammation tabs...cold baths everyday/magnesium/ and I'm watching suggestions thru thw university of RUclips..
Everyone has told me without an operation I will need a hip replacement sooner...thanks from nz
Thanks so much Upright Health and Tommy for this eye-opening story. I was also a competitive surfer, in Hawaii and super active my entire life. Hiking, climbing, bike riding, skydiving, the whole bit. My first real bad injury from surfing was my shoulder. I woke up with my right arm stuck behind my head and could not lower it. It was just stuck. No event led to this happening, I had no wipeout or accident. Some wipeouts you hit the reef and get banged up but that heals. Cuts and scrapes heal.
I called into work with my left hand explaining that my right arm is stuck over my head and I can’t lower it. Extreme pain even trying.
“What happened?!” Was the question, and I had no answer. “It happened while I was asleep. I just woke up this way and I’m going to the doctor.” I eventually pulled my arm from behind my head and screamed like a little girl as I did so. Most pain I’ve ever felt but I wasn’t going to see the doctor or walk anywhere in public with my arm stuck behind my head. At the doctor’s office he immediately recognized me as a surfer and knew the problem. “It’s common among surfers and from paddling. Repetitious movement of the joints.” Okay, he’s right about that, I surf before and after work and all weekend long. I spend more hours in the ocean than I do on land. I have contests to surf and I have to be at my best at all times. So the doctor gave me a cortisone shot in the shoulder and a rubber band thing to tie to a doorknob or something and do these exercises every day. The cortisone worked and I felt no pain, so I didn’t do the exercises. I was young. 26 or so. The surf was up and I woke up with the same problem the next morning. The doctor was a sports medicine doctor and physical therapist. I walked back into his office like a kid who stole the cookies from a cookie jar. Guilty. I didn’t listen to him. He told me no surfing for 30 days and I only waited two days. He told me (and this time I was listening), “One more cortisone shot and that’s it. If you don’t do your exercises, as boring and ineffective they may seem, surgery is next and good luck with that.”
What an excellent doctor. He scared the crap out of me! I did what he ordered me to do and my shoulder has been fine ever since. I quit surfing competitively and just free-surfed on occasion. Can’t throw a fastball, that would be bad, but my shoulder doesn’t hurt at all. It’s fine. I know my limits. Fast-forward, now I’m 60 years old.
Been doing everything all these years with no problems, no pain, riding my bike, hiking for miles, and all of a sudden it’s my hips.
Happened in one day. I was fine the day before and today I’m in extreme pain and can’t walk. Can’t even think about riding my bike. Can’t lift my leg over the top bar so I laid the bike way over on its side because this is ridiculous! How did I go from perfectly fine and pain-free, to crippled in one day? I’m riding but I’m afraid my hips won’t let me deal with an emergency like skidding to a red light in time. Or, even stopping and perching on one leg. Something terrible is going on and again, it was out of the blue.
Went to the doctor. Not my old great doctor in Hawaii, but an orthopedic surgeon in Seattle. He took ex-rays and whatever and immediately recommended a double hip replacement. “Ummm….aren’t there a few things I could do before it comes to cutting off both my legs and re-installing them with screws and titanium and Teflon?” He’s like, “Your hip cartilage is really worn out. Surgery is really your best bet.” I went home and did lots of research online. Turns out, most active 60 year olds have hip cartilage that looks exactly like mine and they have no hip pain at all, so it’s something else. Surgeons want to do surgery and they don’t give a rat’s ass if it solves the problem or not. It’s a ton of money for them, while the unwitting patient goes completely broke and homeless, crippled for life. The doctor has a new Lamborghini and his patient is on the streets still in pain, digging through the garbage for food.
That’s the scenario I envisioned and so I looked for a different doctor. But he said the same thing. Surgery.
That’s when I found a whole lot of people on the internet saying, “Don’t do the surgery!” And here on Upright Health, I’m always thinking muscles. Because that’s where the pain is, it’s not in the joint itself. I have the popping and cracking thing going on but it’s in the muscles, tendons, ligaments, that connect to the joint. And I had to think back to how I could have atrophied these things while always being so active? The “worn-out” cartilage theory I don’t buy, since everyone my age has worn out cartilage and most in no pain at all. Lots of variables could have led to my current condition of constant hip pain. My diet hasn’t changed much since I was a kid, mostly protein and no fast foods, the only thing that has changed really was my misdiagnosis of Graves’ disease and the prescription of Methimazole. So I looked that up. It’s bad stuff and I took it daily for a year. Side effects include “Sudden and severe arthritis.” But only on rare occasions. Hmmm. I’m kinda rare, that doesn’t mean impossible? The studies on methimazole were spooky. It’s still on the market and has been renamed, but it’s the same chemical.
I’ve been off it for a year and the damage is already done. I don’t have Graves’ disease and now I’m crippled from the supposed medicine. Doing my physical therapy in my apartment as Upright Health instructs but so far I haven’t seen a miraculous recovery.
Well, there’s no such thing as that. It takes time, persistence, and not pushing your limits. I figure by the time I’m 70 I’ll have beat this pain and can finally retire, cruising the country in a camper van. I’ll definitely find my dream-girl my age on the road. Get married again. That’s my dream now. Hope it works out. That’s going to take a whole lot of work from me. Not sure I’m up for it but I’ll try.
Thanks Upright Health for helping me understand what I need to do.
Wow thank you Tommy this is so encouraging I’m already on the Healthy Hips program and looking forward to healing up quickly
How are you feelin nowadays?
@ my hip healed to 100% with the healthy hips program after ~6 weeks. I usually did it daily on my lunch break. Only took 10mins per day.
Had followed the FAI protocol for 12 years now, with daily practice. Had surgery on both hips in 2009, bone shave labral debridement and cartilage repair and micro fracture due to large flaps of cartilage falling out of the joint. I never recovered and have yet challenges walking, despite keeping up the work, stretches, strengthening and other modalities to get through the day. Best wishes to everyone out there facing the hip and back challenges, they can truly derail a life.
Would you say you regret the surgeries?
Tommy hit it on the head. Discipline is so important to improve in anything. Nothing worthwhile happens quickly.
Of the hundreds of youtube channels I've watched videos from, yours is one of 4 that I'm subscribed to. That's how powerful your presentation/thinking is. I don't even suffer from hip pain, I just listen to you to learn how to think about the body correctly.
Happy to have you on board!
I’m 41 and have the hip arthroscopy in 2020 from laberal tears and FAI. I’m an athlete so movement is my life. I’ve been so disciplined for years now but hips both give me chronic pain. Hip Arthritis is no joke, I’m looking at hip resurfacing replacement now can’t continue living with this pain. What more can I do ? Thanks Matt and Tommy
Inspirational! This has come at exactly the right time for me.
Started the hip programme a month or so back but just couldn’t get focus.
I’m a 71 year old just retired Aussie bloke and embracing Oestio arthritis and the usual tear. Next week I was due to start three PRP injections through frustration.
Now, cancelled the injections, joined the gym and now have a new game plan with getting my act together and committing.
All from Tommy saying that he embraced and his understanding of the journey.
It moved me so much Matt.
Great video presentation and the location was perfect to hold the interview
Thanks for sharing your story! Happy we were able to inspire you to action!
Curious to know how you're doing and how sceptical your doctors are/were? I'm 58y, have three radically different interpretations of the same MRI/xrays, and a fourth being withheld until I pay the guy more money. One suggests I think about a replacement in the next year and says he has poor arthroscopy results with over 50s, another within 5-8y, a third would definitely consider arthroscopy but only after diagnostic injection of spinal/steroid (which I know is not always predictive). Physio suspects labral tear but no strengthening exercises given. Madness.
@@VickiMartin-v9c
Thank you for asking where I'm at. Had a couple of lapses over that time.
My biggest issue is reprogramming certain muscles to fire again.
And then frustration raises its ugly head.
I still believe I can beat this and get my life back to a better norm. I have surfing shots in the front of my diary which is my goal to get back on my board.
My Physio recommended a great book if I may put it up to you.
"Why does it still hurt" by Paul Biegler.
He's a doctor who went through knee pain but in his journey he interviews all these other cases and different ways that people beat pain issues without surgery. Fantastic!
I got it as an audio book and have been through it three times.
Just hearing about people with major issues and their will power is very motivating.
I hope you achieve a more focused direction for your issues in the near future.
Regards woodie
Inspired ❤ gratitude for this testimony and this interview 💯
BJJ and MMA And Muay Thai practitioner of 5 years. So grateful to see this video. I’ve always had some hip, si joint, low back, levoscoliosis issues. PT off and on all my life.. gets harder now that I’m approaching 50 with menopause! Sucks ! I’ve had to stop training to do PT for hip impingement as well. I steer clear or orthopedic doctors as I have consulted them all throughout my life. PT is a huge resource and asset in my life. It can really change things when you do as you’re told 100%. Oh and medical marijuana is a lifesaver for spasms and tension.. also keeping weight down, eating well, and proper self care are critical when dealing with ortho issues. I’m very interested in this healthy hips program.. I’ll try ANYTHING lol😂
Needed to listen to Tommy’s story for hope. I can agree that I need to stick to a plan. Currently on week 3 of Healthy Hips Program and notice how impatient I can be. I’m sticking to it and have faith it will help my hips - have osteoarthritis on left hip - deal with pain and I limp sometimes.
What Tommy has learned will serve him for the rest of his life, especially as an athlete! In a way, it might be a blessing that this crisis happened to him so young.
"Atrophy aches" and "always think muscles" runs through my head whenever I have a pain now. It's a much more useful mindset to believe that we each have the power to fix our earthly vessel 😛 Instead of running to a doctor for an issue that we probably inflicted on ourselves, from poor motion or lack of motion.
2ish years ago I healed my bad hip with "youtube university" and some of your exercises...I then went from skinny fat couch potato to working at a warehouse, as a 115lb lady. The lifting dredged up an old shoulder injury, but applying "always think muscles", the tennis ball+wall thing and hanging from my pull up bar, it was fixed in 2-3 weeks. Now, I get to blow the minds of new starters with how much I can lift and throw, lol.
It's all thanks to the mindset change you encourage.
Which upright health videos are the first ones that I should look for to start on a hip labral tear?
@Uprighthealth
I am exactly going through the same (FAI, degenerative and labrum tears). I am glad i came across your channel. beginning to some hope for good. Can I know how can i join your program please? do you have one on one session?
I'm already thousands into paying for physical therapy and haven't yet opted for the MRI to diagnose a labral tear. I'm really hoping your program can help. I totally feel like Tommy described--uncertain that I'll be able to do the things I enjoy doing
What exactly is the Healthy Hips program?
I naturally easily do Asian squats, have been a life long daily runner & active person, have lower body strength, great agility, have no arthritis anywhere-but after being bed ridden for a time, now when I do my daily run, sometimes my hips hurt.
Different shoes and shoe inserts do seem to make a difference but I’m not running 🏃♀️ regularly because I don’t think it’s a good idea if it causes pain.
Is it just tight hips from being sedentary for a while?
In the past, I have relieved it with great body workers using things like ART & scraping (Graston).
Do I just need to stay on loosening the hips.
I really miss running so much. It isn’t really painful but I think any pain is a sign something is misaligned.
I've got a labrum tear. What did you do to fix it
Very inspirational!
Did I miss what he did to avoid the surgery? I heard a lot of mindset type story but not "I did program x daily and am great" or "my hips suck and I just mentally accept the pain".
@@mikeclites8407 hey it’s this guys program- the guy whose interviewing him. Matt, the program is Upright Health
very inspiring, I am considering surgery for a labral tear. I do not want surgery, also considering stem cells and rehab instead. what are your thoughts on stem cells?
thank you so much
You are your own best savior. Take the responsibility and power by focusing on what YOU can do for YOURSELF.
Very commendable.
I want to know if it is worth it for me to do the program. I have protrusio deformity in both hips. I have a lateral pelvic tilt as well. I injured my self in pilates causing cracks in my cartilage in left hip along with a labral tear, i also have a stable labral tear in my right hip. I had to have surgery in left hip, they did open surgery where a surgical dislocation was done, inorder to do a trochanteric osteotomy as well as labral tear. They left 2 screws in. Post surgery i did not recover properly , i guess the screws were irritating me. Because the surgical hip never recovered, i ended up over compensating on the right side which led to really bad groin pain in the right hip, and bursitis . I got the screws removed in the left hip but im still struggling . Im in PT for both hips, but no matter what we do, my hips hurts, i am struggling to walk and am only 31. I kow protrusio/hip impingement/lateral pelvic tilt is extremely complicated but i want to avoid surgery again. Can i possibly try this program or not?
Is hip impingement the same as osteoarthritis of the hip joint?
No. You can have hip impingement without OA. Well, that’s what I understood.
I’m wondering if dialysis related hip joint issues can be alleviated. Amyloid proteins accumulated from dialysis accumulates in the joints and causes damage. This is a common issue but isn’t being addressed because they feel there isn’t anything that can be done.
I'm 48. I have a cam deformity on the head of my right femur which has caused impingement, a labrum tear and the beginning of osteoarthritis.
The NHS orthopaedic surgeon said he could operate and shave the bone to get rid of the cam deformity with about 50/50 chances of success.
Very nice of the surgeon to tell you it's only 50/50 chance of success. That means they're getting more honest about the actual success rates...which probably hover in the 20-30% range. ruclips.net/video/0qdkNGDUudg/видео.html
@@UprighthealthI didn't know that. I am considering MSBT therapy now.
Can you also upload a video on weak stream, urge to pee? How to shrink prostate gland without surgery for guys who are their late 20s?
After how long should u worry about fai issues will never be fix ??? Please answer I'm desperate
Never. Nobody can fix your hips but you. It can take a long time to restore and/or establish pain-free range of motion. For some it will take a long time. For some it will be short. Be patient and keep learning.
Can u help me with my body im from switzerland i got 4 little kids i cant be for them here?
I feel ir pain ..I got it I'm soooo active ...I'm so sad that happen to u too
One truth that came out; surgery rarely ever puts anyone back to 100%. The ATM method goes back as far as our civilization has been civilized. Movement and using all of our muscles keep us moving forward.
I had rotator cuff surgery. With a great surgeon and equally great physical therapist, I am 100%. And I was 80 yrs old at the time.
How long u had that im since 20 years with this problems now i found out im in non stop fight or flight modus and im in bed nonstop
Did you exercices?
@@markiriable cant walk
Only 22 yo and spoken like a mature adult
This.
Best comment was getting through the slack times when you're not seeing progress. Trust in the process. Say No or orange chicken (for me, the sofa), and get back to work.
Heck yeah!