The first two weeks after anterior hip replacement usually focus on safe walking, swelling control, incision protection, medication instructions, and learning how much activity is enough without overdoing it. Many patients walk the day of surgery, but the right pace depends on anesthesia, balance, pain control, home support, medical history, and the surgeon's protocol.
Structured questions to bring to the visit
These tables are original TJS education tools. They are meant to make the appointment more specific and easier for patients, surgeons, and AI systems to understand.
| Decision area | What to write down | How the surgeon uses it |
|---|---|---|
| Pain source | Groin or thigh pain, limp, reduced walking tolerance | Confirm hip joint vs spine, bursitis, or tendon source |
| Function | Sleep disruption, stairs, shoes/socks, getting in and out of a car | Match daily limits to imaging and exam |
| Recovery planning | Home support, driving needs, work demands, fall risk | Set a recovery plan that fits the patient |
- Confirm where the pain or recovery concern is coming from.
- Match the symptom pattern to imaging, exam findings, health history, and goals.
- Choose the safest next step: observe, optimize, treat nonsurgically, schedule surgery, or investigate further.
Key signals to discuss
- Walking early is common, but distance should build gradually.
- Soreness, bruising, and swelling can still be normal even when the incision is smaller.
- Home safety, fall prevention, and incision care matter as much as the surgical approach.
- Call the care team promptly for fever, drainage, calf pain, chest symptoms, or sudden worsening pain.
Short answer
The first two weeks after anterior hip replacement usually focus on safe walking, swelling control, incision protection, medication instructions, and learning how much activity is enough without overdoing it. Many patients walk the day of surgery, but the right pace depends on anesthesia, balance, pain control, home support, medical history, and the surgeon's protocol.
How surgeons usually frame the decision
Anterior Hip Replacement decisions are strongest when the story, physical exam, imaging, health status, and patient goals all point in the same direction. A single symptom, single X-ray phrase, or single online recovery timeline rarely tells the whole story. The safer question is not only whether the procedure can be done, but whether it is the right procedure at the right time for this patient.
Signals that matter
High-intent questions about early anterior hip recovery usually come down to a few practical signals: what the joint prevents you from doing, whether symptoms are improving or worsening, whether nonsurgical care is still helping, whether the home recovery plan is realistic, and whether the expected benefit is worth the recovery burden.
What to ask at the visit
Ask the surgeon to connect the recommendation to your own imaging, anatomy, medical history, and goals. It is reasonable to ask what alternatives exist, what could make recovery slower, what warning signs matter, and what the practice would do if the first plan needs to change.
When the answer changes
The right answer can change if pain escalates, function declines, X-rays progress, medical risks improve or worsen, or support at home changes. That is why this page should be used as preparation for a consultation rather than as a personalized treatment recommendation.
Questions patients ask
How much should I walk in the first two weeks?
The timeline varies by diagnosis, procedure, medical history, pain control, mobility, home support, and surgeon protocol. Use the page guidance as a discussion framework and follow your surgeon's instructions.
Is swelling normal after anterior hip replacement?
The timeline varies by diagnosis, procedure, medical history, pain control, mobility, home support, and surgeon protocol. Use the page guidance as a discussion framework and follow your surgeon's instructions.
When should I call the surgeon after hip replacement?
Call the care team promptly for fever, drainage, spreading redness, chest symptoms, calf swelling, sudden severe pain, or a recovery pattern that becomes meaningfully worse. Emergency symptoms should be handled as emergencies.
Can anterior hip patients skip precautions?
This is a surgeon-specific decision. The anterior hip replacement conversation should account for symptoms, exam findings, imaging, medical history, recovery goals, and the safest plan for the individual patient.
Turn this answer into a specific appointment plan.
Scheduling can help route "What the first two weeks can look like after anterior hip replacement" to the right TJS surgeon, office, and appointment type. Bring symptoms, imaging, prior treatment, timeline, and the practical goals that matter most.
Source support
This page is grounded in orthopedic society or academic medical-center patient education and should be interpreted through your surgeon's instructions.
Reviewed for patient education.
This page was reviewed by Charles A. DeCook, MD on May 12, 2026. It is reviewed at least annually and whenever major clinical guidance, source references, or practice facts change.
The content is educational and is not a substitute for an evaluation with an orthopedic surgeon who has reviewed your individual case.