Hip Labrum Repair Surgery – 5 weeks post op

It has been a big milestone week!

I started Monday morning in PT with my usual therapy routine and at the end we added weight bearing tests. First I stood at the edge of the table and just slowly shifted my weight from foot to foot “until it felt ok”. The first one felt like waking my hip up a bit but the second one felt pretty normal so then my therapist told me to do longer holds on my right (surgical)side. After a few reps of that she watched me while I changed to shifting my weight to my right foot and then lifting my left foot off the ground. At the first rep she said “Oh perfect! No hip drop at all! Do 10 reps and hold for 10.”

After that I did step throughs at the edge of the table. Which is basically just walking one step forward and then backwards next to the table, while making sure to use heel to toe foot impact pattern. That took a lot of focus since I’m usually a toe walker myself (bad I know!) I did 20 of those and my therapist announced I was definitely ready to be walking this week. I also did standing straight leg kicks forward, to the side, and back at an angle on both legs – very minimally of with the hip extensors of course and with no resistance.

She told me to go down to one crutch in the meanwhile and if I do well with that I would be able to drop that and be free after my session on Thursday. That first night I felt pretty good but decided to fire up the ice machine for sleep just in case. I probably did not need it, but I decided any time I do a big new thing I will add ice pre-emptively for the hip flexors to help keep the savage beast soothed. The approach seems to be working so far as I woke up feeling just fine!

Adjusting to just one crutch was weird at first and I just slowed myself down to about a quarter of the speed I had been going at with two crutches and then I was fine. Just like drilling Jiu Jitsu moves, I had to practice the movement slowly first to make sure I do it correctly – and as I gain the muscle memory/dexterity/strength, the speed is coming back slowly on its own. Pushing speed first is how injury and pain happens.

Tuesday/Wednesday: in the office

I went back into the office again on Tuesday and Wednesday. I was super slow moving around of course and I allowed myself to stretch out in a more comfortable position as well for the day. I’m still going to be sticking with the pattern of working from home on days I have physical therapy just in case I end up having a really exhausting session and just need a lie down afterwards.

The walking practice does definitely exhaust me. I’m not sore at all so far but I’m definitely really wanting to nap by mid-day. Hopefully I’ll build my stamina back up soon but I’m doing my best to reign myself in so I don’t overdo it and flare anything up when things have been going so well so far!

My boss picked up some supplies for me from the hardware store to repair my old wooden cane, so that’s going to be my project for the weekend! I took it into the back of our warehouse and got it structurally sound again, but now I need to sand it down and figure out what I’m going to do to finish it out and make it pretty again.

Being in the office these two days means I get to pop in on the daytime Jiu Jitsu classes again as well which has been nice! I’ll be planning the same itinerary for next week as well since it seemed to work out pretty well this week without too many hiccups.

Thursday:

Back at physical therapy again today, my therapist said we that I looked really good walking in on my one crutch and that when I did my one-legged stands and movements my balanced looked rock solid on my surgical side. So she okayed me to walk without my crutches a little bit in my apartment this weekend if I felt up to it. She additionally told me that we could start pushing a little bit more range of motion and a tiny bit of external rotation (she specified TINY). I translate that information to: I’ll move myself as far as she moves me during her passive range of motion work but I’m not pushing anything on my own.

She also mentioned that she might be starting me on the stationary bike soon for session warmups. That got me all excited about getting back into outdoor biking and she slapped me back down pretty quickly from that – but said I might be able to get back outside before the weather gets too gross for it.

I also got to add on sets of shallow bodyweight squats to my routine as well today – those felt pretty good! Basically, activating muscles and moving around makes everything feel good, so it’s just a matter of reigning it in and riding that fine line of enough to let it heal, but not overdoing it or causing anything to flare up.

Friday:

Today ended up incidentally becoming a work from home day as well because my coworkers were unable to pick me up this morning. So everyone missed out on the momentous moment that was me being able to put on leggings for the first time since surgery! Since my PT said I could bend a bit more, I decided to see if it was comfortable to bend far enough to put on leggings, and I didn’t feel a stretch at all in my hip even to straighten my socks! Now having shorter legs probably comes in handy a bit here; but still!

This made me realize how much my legs need the biofeedback of compression leggings. It’s a small thing but it really does help me feel so much better after spending over a month wearing baggy shorts. I have a lot of sensory issues that go along with my autism: temperature regulation, touch, etc. – and they are a protective barrier in that regard. I also get episodes of orthostatic hypotension, basically a circulation/blood pressure issue where they tell you to watch your fluids and electrolytes levels and I also tend to get swelling in my legs a bit – compression leggings help with the swelling. Finally, I also have a connective tissue disorder that affects everything, and the little extra bit of outer layer just sometimes feels like it’s just the tiniest ease of that burden.

Anyhow, that all said, I love my compression leggings. In fact, I just ordered some more because why not?

What’s Next?

I see my surgeon again on the 8th which will put it in my 8-week post-op update. Depending on how news is flowing I may then switch from weekly updates to every other week or monthly updates on surgery recovery. The goal is for this series to just naturally morph into a training log back to the tournament podium.

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