Surgery Planning for High-Risk Patients (kidney disease, Hepatitis B, comorbidities)
Many patients with kidney disease, Hepatitis B, diabetes, autoimmune disorders, or multiple comorbidities worry whether hip surgery is safe. These conditions do not prevent surgery, but they require detailed planning and medical optimisation.
Preoperative clearance is done with specialists to ensure kidney and liver function are stable, infection risk is minimised, and medications are adjusted appropriately. Surgical timing is chosen carefully to maximise safety.
This planning is especially important in complex procedures such as Revision Hip Replacement Surgery or Re-Revision Hip Replacement Surgery, where operative time and implant complexity may be higher.
Even in medically high-risk patients, modern techniques like muscle-sparing hip replacement can support early mobilisation when appropriately selected Direct Anterior (DAA) Hip Replacement, Mini Posterior Hip Replacement).
FAQs
Can high-risk patients safely undergo hip surgery?
Yes, with proper Surgery planning for high-risk patients (kidney disease, Hepatitis B, comorbidities).
Why is medical clearance essential before surgery?
Clearance reduces complications in Direct Anterior (DAA) Hip Replacement or Mini Posterior Hip Replacement.
Is revision surgery riskier in comorbid patients?
Revision Hip Replacement Surgery requires even stricter high-risk planning.
Does DAA reduce recovery burden in high-risk patients?
Direct Anterior (DAA) Hip Replacement may support faster mobilisation in selected patients.
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