Who Is a Candidate for Minimally Invasive Hip Surgery?
Minimally invasive hip surgery is a special type of hip surgery that is performed through small incisions. This type of surgery generally allows for less blood loss during surgery and faster recovery times after surgery. A good candidate for minimally invasive hip surgery should meet a variety of criteria.
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Non-obese individuals
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Individuals of normal weight are the best candidates for minimally invasive hip surgery, which often requires special body positioning and imaging techniques, which, on an obese individual, are often complicated or made unattainable due to excessive body fat.
Individuals with certain hip disorders
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Minimally invasive hip surgery is oftentimes not an option to treat certain types of hip disorders or injuries, including severe hip dysplasia or severe hip fractures. The best candidates for minimally invasive hip surgery are individuals with soft tissue problems or minor anatomical abnormalities about the hip.
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Individuals with normal hip anatomy
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Normal, or near-normal, hip joint anatomy is generally a requirement for minimally invasive hip surgery to be successful. Minimally invasive hip surgery is performed through tiny incisions that restrict the degree of surgical correction that can be made. Severe hip joint abnormalities oftentimes require larger surgical incision procedures to correct.
Shorter individuals
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Individuals who are tall or excessively long-limbed may not be the best candidates for minimally invasive hip surgery. Tall individuals oftentimes require longer surgical incisions to adequately navigate around and repair their longer and larger hip bones.
Healthy individuals
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Although minimally invasive hip surgery is generally less traumatic to the body and better tolerated than standard hip surgery, individuals undergoing minimally invasive hip surgery should be in good health and free from any active infection in the body.
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