When hip pain becomes severe or long-standing and starts affecting walking, sitting, sleep, and daily movement, replacement may become part of the treatment discussion. The right decision starts with reviewing symptom burden, hip structure, and how much wear is affecting daily life before surgery is considered.

Difficulty walking, sitting, sleeping, or loading the leg are all important parts of the decision.
Imaging and examination help define how much the hip has been affected and whether replacement is appropriate.
Medication, physiotherapy, and activity adjustment may stop delivering meaningful relief in more advanced cases.
Walking, sitting, turning, and stairs help show how much the hip is affecting daily life.
Marked loss of movement can be an important part of deciding on treatment.
The patient should understand rehabilitation needs and realistic recovery goals before the operation.
The aim is more comfortable walking, sitting, and daily movement with less pain.
The first stages after surgery involve guided movement and recovery planning.
Walking ability, comfort, and rehabilitation progress are reviewed during recovery.
No. Replacement is discussed only when symptoms, wear, and functional impact clearly justify it.
The aim is meaningful improvement in pain and function, but recovery still takes time and follow-up.
Yes. Other suitable options can be reviewed according to the condition and the stage of disease.
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