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Managing Hip Bursitis Pain

Bones, Joints & Muscles | Last Active: Jun 11 7:33pm | Replies (104)

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Hi, I just found this group. (I am part of the kidney group.) I have been having discussions the a Facebook bursitis group for about four years. I was diagnosed with bursitis in 2022 by a Pain Management Specialist who used physical examination coupled with x-rays. I learned from the FB group that the optimal imaging for "seeing" bursitis is MRI but because I had an incompatible implant, that was not possible. That specialist recommended cortisone shots into the bursa because the only analgesic my nephrologist permits is tylenol which you will not be surprised to hear did nothing for my pain. So I let him do a cortisone injection into the bursa of my more painful leg. It was a miracle that lasted a few months. I then had the shots into both legs. Again, the miracle occurred.

But the third round was a complete failure. I then went to see an orthopedist who took new x-rays. The radiologist wrote that both of my hips had advanced osteoarthritis (the report accompanying the earlier x-rays had characterized it as mild OA). Total bilateral hip replacement was recommended. It's hard to say how effective the first surgery was because at PT on Day 5 after surgery, my femur cracked. As I recall the post-surgery pain up to that point was not the same as I had been having before surgery. Unfortunately, a gate keeper nurse on the orthopedist's "team" would only offer that opinion (without seeing me), via messages on the patient portal, that I was not carrying out the self care the brochure I had been given outlined. Of course that was not true but after two attempts to convince that nurse otherwise, I just put up and shut up.

At the six week post-op appt with the orthopedist (that I went to on crutches), new x-rays were taken which said show that I had suffered a cracked femur which was now healing. (I googled "cracked femur after hip replacement" but apparently I am a unique case. The only "hits" I got were medical journal articles outlining cases of broken femurs decades after hip replacement.)

I am not sure what possessed me. I should have settled for this outcome. But I decided to have the second hip replacement when the orthopedist described how the crack could be prevented by wrapping the femur with titanium wire. Fortunately, that worked.

Unfortunately, I continued to have so much pain that the PT's sent me home to recover more before attempting the exercises they wanted to teach me. That went on for a year. I had so much regret.

But then in Oct 2025 (over a year after the second hip replacement), I had what I thought might be my second gout flare in the same or neighboring toe as the first one in 2022. I had a bottle of colchicine, the gout specific analgesic, so I took a dose. I figured that if the pain diminished, I was right. If it didn't, I see my "gout" doctor (a nephrologist because rheumatology didn't believe I had gout since only uric acid was high, I had a sore, red, swollen toe for 3 months that was not broken. Rheumatology wanted a tophus to test. I didn't have one so no appt could be made.)

The best part of taking a trial dose of colchicine was not the total toe pain relief but that within a few hours, my hip pain VANISHED! So I have gout in my pelvis. A Dual Scan CT showed I also have pseudogout (aka chondrocalcinosis) in my pelvis. And as an amazing coincidence, pseudogout pain is one of three conditions that colchicine helps with pain relief. The other is Familial Mediterranean Fever which as a person of Japanese descent seemed unlikely to be my problem.

So 18 months after my first hip replacement, I made the PT appointment to learn the exercises I should do to recover. Two months later, for the first time in 5+ years, I was able to walk three miles on a mostly flat trail.

My conclusion is that hip pain is hard to diagnose. I hope you have faster results that I did. Next week is a planned trial of bike riding. I haven't been able to dismount alone since 2019. Hopeful.

I almost forgot. The orthopedist told me no more bursa cortisone shots. He reported seeing "too many" torn tendons in patients who had "too many" of those shots.

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Replies to "Hi, I just found this group. (I am part of the kidney group.) I have been..."

@mnsansei - those shots will give you osteoporosis!! Get a $1.25 gel pack at dollar tree-microwave 25seconds-stick in pants waitlist band/or freeze-stop oain