ReHIPS Guide: Non-Surgical Alternatives for Hip Pain
Hip pain can limit mobility, reduce quality of life, and make everyday tasks difficult. ReHIPS focuses on conservative, non-surgical approaches that relieve pain, restore function, and delay or avoid hip replacement when possible. This guide summarizes evidence-based options, how they work, expected timelines, and practical tips to choose and combine treatments.
Who can benefit
- People with early-to-moderate osteoarthritis of the hip
- Those with tendon or bursae irritation, hip impingement, or muscle imbalance
- Patients seeking to postpone or avoid surgery
- People cleared by their clinician for conservative management
Key goals of non-surgical care
- Reduce pain and inflammation
- Improve hip range of motion and strength
- Correct movement patterns that overload the joint
- Maintain cardiovascular fitness without joint strain
- Improve daily function and quality of life
Core non-surgical options
-
Physical therapy and targeted exercise
- What it is: Individualized programs from a physical therapist focusing on hip strength (gluteus medius/maximus), core stability, range-of-motion, and gait mechanics.
- Why it works: Strengthening and motor control reduce joint load and improve stability.
- Timeline: Noticeable improvement often in 6–12 weeks; sustained gains with ongoing home exercises.
- Practical tips: Prioritize progressive resistance, single-leg balance, and functional movements like step-ups and squats with correct form.
-
Weight management and activity modification
- What it is: Reducing body weight and adjusting activities that provoke pain (e.g., high-impact sports).
- Why it works: Less body mass reduces compressive forces across the hip joint.
- Timeline: Pain can improve as weight lowers; small losses (5–10%) often yield meaningful symptom relief.
- Practical tips: Use low-impact cardio (walking, cycling, swimming); work with a dietitian for sustainable weight loss.
-
Medications and topical agents
- What it is: Acetaminophen, NSAIDs (oral or topical), and topical capsaicin or diclofenac gels. Short-term opioid use only for severe flares under close supervision.
- Why it works: Reduce pain and inflammation to enable participation in rehab.
- Timeline: Rapid symptom relief for flares; aim to minimize long-term NSAID use due to side effects.
- Practical tips: Try topical NSAIDs first for local effect with fewer systemic risks; consult your clinician about safe dosing.
-
Injections (corticosteroid, hyaluronic acid, PRP)
- What it is: Image-guided injections into the hip joint or surrounding tissues. Options include corticosteroids, viscosupplementation (hyaluronic acid), and platelet-rich plasma (PRP).
- Why it works: Corticosteroids reduce inflammation quickly; hyaluronic acid and PRP may improve lubrication and modulate healing.
- Timeline: Steroid relief can be days to weeks, lasting weeks–months; HA and PRP effects often take weeks and may last months.
- Practical tips: Use ultrasound guidance for accuracy; limit steroid frequency to avoid cartilage damage; discuss costs and evidence with your clinician.
-
Bracing, orthotics, and assistive devices
- What it is: Canes, walkers, shoe inserts, or hip braces that alter load distribution.
- Why it works: Offloads the joint and improves stability during walking and daily tasks.
- Timeline: Immediate symptom relief when used correctly.
- Practical tips: Use a cane in the hand opposite the painful hip; get shoe inserts fitted for alignment issues.
-
Activity-specific therapies (manual therapy, acupuncture)
- What it is: Hands-on joint/muscle techniques from therapists, and complementary treatments like acupuncture.
- Why it works: May reduce pain, improve mobility, and facilitate exercise participation.
- Timeline: Often provides short-term relief; best when combined with exercise.
- Practical tips: Seek licensed providers and integrate these therapies into a broader rehab plan.
-
Emerging and adjunctive options (shockwave therapy, laser)
- What it is: Therapies aiming to stimulate tissue healing or reduce pain.
- Why it works: Some studies show benefit for tendinopathies; hip-specific evidence is growing.
- Timeline: Variable; often used when standard approaches are insufficient.
- Practical tips: Consider as adjuncts and review evidence and cost.
How to choose and combine treatments
- Start with a comprehensive assessment (history, exam, imaging as needed).
- Prioritize exercise and activity modification as the foundation.
- Use medications and injections to control pain so you can participate in rehab.
- Add assistive devices and manual therapies for symptom control and function.
- Reassess every 8–12 weeks and escalate or change strategy if goals aren’t met.
Red flags — see a clinician promptly
- Sudden severe pain, fever, or signs of infection
- New or worsening neurologic symptoms (numbness, weakness)
- Rapid loss of function or inability to bear weight
Expected outcomes and realistic goals
- Many patients achieve meaningful pain reduction and improved function without surgery, especially with structured rehab and lifestyle changes.
- Some with advanced joint damage may still need surgical evaluation; non-surgical care can delay surgery and improve pre-op condition.
Quick 8-week ReHIPS starter plan
| Week | Focus |
|---|---|
| 1–2 | Pain control: topical NSAID, activity modification, begin gentle ROM and walking program |
| 3–4 | Add progressive strengthening (glutes, core), start balance work, consider medical review for injections if pain limits therapy |
| 5–6 | Increase resistance, start functional training (step-ups, single-leg exercises), consider supervised cardio (cycling, pool) |
| 7–8 | Reassess pain/function; continue home program, plan long-term maintenance and weight-loss strategies |
If you want, I can convert this into a printable one-page handout, a 12-week progressive exercise plan with photos, or a patient-facing summary tailored to age/activity level.
Leave a Reply