Summary: After a hip replacement, your new joint is solid from day one -- it's the muscles around it that need rebuilding. The old advice of "take it easy for 6 weeks" is being replaced by evidence showing that earlier, progressive strengthening leads to better outcomes. Ice beats heat for the first
Think of your new hip joint like a perfectly installed door hinge -- it swings smoothly from the moment it's put in. But the wall it's mounted in (your muscles, tendons, and capsule) got drilled into during installation. The hinge works fine, but the wall needs time to set and harden. If you baby the wall too long, it heals weak. If you stress it the right amount, the repair comes back stronger than before.
The Plain English Version
Your new hip is strong from day one -- it's the muscles around it that need rebuilding.
Think of your new hip joint like a perfectly installed door hinge -- it swings smoothly the moment it's put in. But the wall it's mounted in (your muscles, tendons, and capsule) got drilled into during installation. The hinge works fine, but the wall needs time to set and harden. Baby it too long, and it heals weak. Stress it the right amount, and the repair comes back stronger than before.
Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling
Leg press, hip abduction, hip extension at 60-80% capacity. 3-4 sets of 8-10 reps, 2-3 times per week starting week 2 (supervised).
Multiple RCTs show superior leg power, walking speed, and chair-rise performance vs standard low-intensity exercises. Measurable gains by week 4-6.
Cold-flow devices at 10-15C with compression, 30-minute sessions every 2-3 hours while awake during weeks 1-2.
2025 systematic review: significant reduction in inflammation markers, thigh swelling, and pain medication use vs passive ice packs.
30-60 minutes daily, broken into 5-10 minute bouts (weeks 1-2), progressing to longer walks. Walker to cane when standing safely for 30 seconds.
Early mobilization within 24 hours reduces blood clot risk, improves independence, and accelerates discharge. Walker to cane transition typically weeks 3-4.
20 minutes on, 40 minutes off, 3-4 times daily. Effective for pain when compression devices aren't available, but less effective for swelling.
10 reps, 5-10 second holds, 2-3 times daily starting day 1. Prevents further muscle wasting and maintains nerve-muscle connection.
Mini-squats, sit-to-stand from elevated surface, low step-ups. Bodyweight, 3 sets of 10, 2-3 times daily.
Buoyancy-assisted movement in a pool. Only after wound is fully closed and surgeon gives clearance (typically week 4-6 at earliest). Limited research specific to early post-hip-replacement.
1 x 20 | Every hour while awake
Pump feet up and down like pressing a gas pedal. Keeps blood flowing to prevent clots. No pain expected.
1 x 10 | 3x daily
Lie on your back, push the back of your knee into the bed, tighten your thigh. Hold 5-10 seconds. Should feel effort, no sharp pain.
1 x 10 | 3x daily
Lie on your back, squeeze your buttocks together. Hold 5-10 seconds. Gentle effort only.
1 x 10 | 2x daily
Lie on your back, slide your heel toward your buttock, bending the knee. Stop before 90 degrees. Gentle stretch is fine.
3 x 10 | Daily
Sit on a firm, elevated chair. Stand up using both legs equally. Sit back down slowly. Arms for balance only.
3 x 10 | Daily
Stand holding a counter, bend both knees slightly (quarter depth). Don't go deeper than comfortable.
3 x 10 | Daily
Stand holding a counter, slowly lift your operated leg out to the side. Should feel effort in the side of your hip.
Increase resistance / depth
Add light resistance band to hip abduction. Deepen mini-squats if comfortable. Walk 20-30 minutes continuously.
20-30 min continuous
Walk independently around the house without a cane. Outdoors with cane if needed for uneven terrain.
These criteria must be met before progressing to phase 2 rehabilitation (weeks 7-12):
No heavy bilateral leg work (barbell squats, deadlifts) until surgeon clearance -- typically 12+ weeks. Upper body seated training may resume from week 2-3 if comfortable.
The research: Resistance training trials used strictly supervised sessions 2-3 times per week with monitored load progression.
The reality: Insurance limits, transport issues, and motivation mean most patients end up doing unsupervised home exercises. Adherence drops significantly without supervision.
Adjustment: Keep the home program short (4-5 exercises max). Use telehealth check-ins at weeks 2 and 4 to monitor progression. Simplicity beats complexity for compliance.
The research: Level 1 evidence shows strict hip precautions don't reduce dislocation rates and slow recovery.
The reality: Up to two-thirds of surgeons still mandate strict precautions. Physical therapists are legally bound to follow the surgeon's specific protocol.
Adjustment: Always follow surgeon instructions. If precautions seem overly restrictive, raise it at the 6-week follow-up -- not unilaterally. Document the evidence gap.
The research: Full neuromuscular recovery takes 12-18 months. ADL independence typically returns by 3 months.
The reality: Up to 33% of younger patients feel their expectations for return to sport are unmet at 12 months. Frustration often peaks around week 6.
Adjustment: Set expectations at visit one. "Your hip is strong, but the muscles need 3-6 months to catch up. The first 6 weeks are the foundation, not the finish line."
Surgery replaces the damaged ball-and-socket hip joint with prosthetic components. The surgical approach determines which muscles are cut and repaired:
The gluteus maximus is split and the short rotator muscles at the back of the hip are detached. Highest risk of dislocation from bending forward + crossing legs + turning the knee inward.
Goes through a natural gap between muscles at the front, sparing most muscle attachments. Risk is from forcing the leg too far back or rotating outward.
Detaches the side-of-hip muscles (gluteus medius and minimus), directly impacting early hip stability and side-stepping ability.
The prosthetic joint itself is mechanically stable from day one. The muscles, tendons, and capsule around it need 6-12 weeks to fully heal. The first 6 weeks set the foundation for everything that follows.
After hip replacement, the primary goal isn't diagnosing the hip -- it's screening for complications.
One-sided calf swelling, warmth, throbbing pain. Use Wells Criteria, not Homan's sign. Wells score of 2+ = urgent scan.
Pain getting worse (not better) after the first 3-5 days. Wound drainage, cloudy fluid, fever. Normal healing = inflammation peaks at 48-72 hours then improves.
Sudden severe pain, audible pop, can't bear weight, leg looks shorter or twisted. Occurs in 1-2.5% of primary hip replacements.
No comprehensive post-operative THA rehabilitation guideline has been published since APTA 2016 (>9 years old). AAOS 2024 updated surgical management but not physical therapy rehabilitation.
Traditional Standard of Care
Strict precautions for 6-8 weeks: no bending past 90 degrees, no crossing legs, no turning knee inward. Requires raised toilet seats, grabbers, specialized equipment.
Meta-analysis, >8,800 patients
No significant difference in dislocation rates between strict and relaxed protocols (RR 1.38, 95% CI 0.73-2.59). Relaxed protocols led to faster return to daily activities.
Modern surgical techniques (larger implant heads, better capsular repair, optimal positioning) have made behavioral restrictions largely unnecessary. Follow your surgeon's specific protocol -- the evidence supports relaxed precautions.
Traditional Rehabilitation
Low-intensity exercise only: gentle range-of-motion, basic quad sets, and walking for the first 6 weeks.
Multiple RCTs (Husby et al.)
Early progressive resistance training at 60-80% capacity from week 1-2 yields superior leg power, walking speed, and sit-to-stand performance.
Muscle wasting after hip replacement is severe. Low-intensity exercise doesn't provide enough stimulus to rebuild. Start supervised resistance training by week 2.
Older Guidance
Return to driving at 2-3 weeks based on how the patient feels and whether they've stopped pain medication.
Simulator Studies
Brake reaction time doesn't return to normal until precisely 6 weeks post-op. Driving before 6 weeks is an objective safety hazard.
Confidence recovers faster than reflexes. Don't drive until 6 weeks (right leg or manual transmission). Left leg with automatic: discuss with surgeon, typically 3-4 weeks.
The simple answer -- "start loading earlier, ditch the old precautions" -- misses important context:
Posterior, anterior, and lateral approaches each have different risk movements and muscle healing timelines. The exercise modifications are not interchangeable. Always confirm your surgeon's specific approach and restrictions before starting.
Most patients feel good in daily life by 6-8 weeks, which creates a dangerous confidence gap. Full muscle strength takes 3-6 months. Complete nerve-muscle recovery can take 12-18 months. The period where you feel ready but aren't objectively recovered (weeks 6-16) is where re-injury and frustration peak.
If you're doing resistance exercises to rebuild muscle, don't ice immediately afterward. Cold applied right after strengthening work can interfere with the muscle-building response. Ice 4+ hours after exercise, or ice only the wound site while avoiding the working muscles. This matters more from week 2 onward when progressive loading begins.
The research showing superior outcomes with early resistance training used supervised sessions. The reality is that most patients do home exercises. Keep the program simple (4-5 exercises max), build clear progression rules, and check in at weeks 2 and 4 to prevent the program from going stale.
How strong is the evidence for the claims in this review? Higher = more confidence the claims are supported. This does not measure how large the effect is or how important it is compared with other levers.
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