Those
aching knees and hips...One in 5 Americans age 60 and older has
experienced significant knee pain on most days over the last six
weeks, and 1 in 7 reports significant hip pain... Each year,
Americans make about 15 million visits to doctors for knee pain and
6 million visits for hip pain
Ten
thousand steps a day. That’s how far you must walk to meet
government guidelines for physical activity to improve health. But
if, like millions of people, you find walking painful or you fear
your joints might buckle beneath you, each step might as well be a
mile.
Your knees and hips are your largest joints. They support
your body’s weight and they must work in close coordination
to provide the mobility most people take for granted until
injury, arthritis, or other problems interfere.
Joint replacement may be the answer
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FAST FACTS
Exercise in water supports your weight, reducing
stress on your joints
•
One in 5 Americans over age 60 have experienced
significant knee pain
•
One in 7 Americans over age 60 report significant
hip pain
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451,000 knee replacement procedures were performed
in 2003 in the U.S.
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364,000 hip replacement procedures were performed in
2003 in the U.S. |
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Depending on the cause of your pain, the solution might be a
set of exercises designed to strengthen and stretch the
muscles that support the joint, taking some of the stress
off the joint itself. Minor surgery may also help. For many
people, knee and hip problems become so intractable that the
best solution is to replace a worn-out knee or hip with a
mechanical joint. In the United States in 2003, there were
451,000 knee replacement and 364,000 hip replacement
procedures performed. The average age at which a person has
such surgery is 65 to 70.
Physically, your knees and hips are closely interdependent, located
as they are at either end of the thighbone. This proximity means the
angle of your hip affects the pressure on your knee. A hip disorder
may cause knee pain, and knee disorders can aggravate hip problems.
People live longer than they used to, so joints need to stay strong
and healthy through those additional years. But both knees and hips
are subject to repetitive trauma — wear and tear — as you age, and
you can traumatize them further if you increase your physical
activity suddenly.
Advanced techniques make surgery easier
Medical care has changed in recent years. Doctors used to follow
surgery by immobilizing the joint with a plaster cast. Weeks of
immobility caused the muscles to weaken and shorten, resulting in
long-lasting stiffness and poor function. Today, you can wake up
from surgery with your knee already being gently bent and
straightened by a machine. In addition, knee and hip replacements
have freed thousands of patients from life in a wheelchair or on
crutches.
Surgical techniques have also advanced. More surgery is performed
through tiny incisions using an arthroscope, often on an outpatient
basis. Pain relief has moved away from mind-clouding narcotics
toward pain relievers that tackle the twin problems of pain and
inflammation.
And
finally, prevention has moved to center stage, alongside surgical
repair and rehabilitation. More strength training added to your
daily exercise routine helps support the joints and protect them
from injury.