Have you had experience with hip dysplasia and hip pain? What helped you? Drop a comment below! 👉🦵Rebuild Your Hips at Home!: www.uprighthealth.com/healthy-hips
@Ksidhu5203 ай бұрын
@Uprighthealth crying watching this video. I've been in constant hip/groin pain for 2 years plus. Docs say hip replacement. That's a road i don't want to go on.. I've been a trainer for 20 years. Miss my life. Watching this video is giving me hope
@carolineb48232 ай бұрын
Hey @Uprighthealth, I’d love to hear your thoughts: I’m a 31-year-old female surfer diagnosed with hip dysplasia (roughly 40% bone loss on both sides) and a labral tear. My hip pain has been very manageable, but I get intense groin pain from time to time, that limits me in some of my daily activities. My doctors advised me to do surgery and also to stop surfing, which has been tough, though I understand the strain surfing puts on my hips. Do you think surfing could still be possible when I avoid surgery? Thank you so much
@emazey50443 ай бұрын
Crying as finally someone speaks my language about trusting your gut. Her journey resonates with mine. Currently doing healthy hips program, slow progress but progress for this senior sixty something lady. ATM my friends. Thanks Matt for this testimonial video. And thanks to Erica for sharing her story. 🙏💕✨
@madeleinesutherland63233 ай бұрын
I empathise with you! As a 79 year old, I've refused the surgical route for years with hip OA that everyone insists is the answer. The ensuing weakness, pain and physical limitations is crushing, on top of pressure from those who mean well. I prayed and believe and confess I am healed, despite the symptoms. As I get worn down with opposition, I find Matt Hsu!!! My determination is restored to stand for my body to get in line with a healthy, painfree and flexibile hip!🙌🙌🙌
@sunshinegirl20153 ай бұрын
You should keep doing more videos like this! It's very motivating and educational!
@afreedom71473 ай бұрын
I refused operation for my hip. A physiotherapist thought me how to be my own physiotherapist. Mental, emotional, physical dedication with love and understanding for the body works miracles.
@michellelivshin273Сағат бұрын
Thank you so much for addressing this!! I was told the same exact story by an orthopedic surgeon, except he didn’t quite explain what I should be doing/what I shouldn’t be doing now. My hips are feeling pain much more often now, it happens in waves, and I mainly feel instability and constant hip popping. I cannot lift my legs up with out feeling the instability, and feeling as if they’re going to pop, which now they almost always do. I’ve first experienced this problem as a 10 year old at gymnastics practice, I attended physical therapy but it wasn’t the biggest help. I definitely want to give physical therapy another try now, I am 23 years old now and am hoping I can still salvage the situation. Thank you for the hope and clarification that you provided.
@zeals9363 ай бұрын
My hip issues developed during my time in active duty military service. I have also a labrum tear and osteoarthritis. PT says I can get better. Doc said I need a hip replacement but I can prevent/delay it by doing PT. From constant fitness training every morning, poor sleep, and very minimal stretching. Add rucking with heavy weight that they do not condition you for or build you up to.. 1-2x a week. Years later I am feeling pain 24/7. I medically retired and still have issues but through yoga and low impact exercises I am experiencing less pain every week. I appreciate what you do and what you share. Although I have a PT, I get so much more in depth information from you. You really change peoples lives when it can become so dark and depressing.
@goddan72223 ай бұрын
@@zeals936 you got this good sir. Thanks for your service and sacrifices
@Uprighthealth3 ай бұрын
It’s dark in the pain hole. Keep climbing. It’s way brighter up on top, and the lessons you learn will change everything about your life and outlook. Frustration is natural. Expect it. But then get going! 👍🙏🤙
@kathleenorchard772028 күн бұрын
I have been dealing with severe pain in my right groin since June. Doctors and PT each had their own idea of the cause. Radiologist missed the hip dysplasia and I have no hip arthritis but two weeks ago a sports medicine othro saw the xray and said I have hip dysplasia. More pronounced on right side but also on left. Told me I’d have to significantly curtail my physical activity. I’m 66 and an extremely active hiker. This pain came out of nowhere. I’ve had minor outer hip pain for 15+ years and had been told it was bursitis. Dr suspects it was the hip dysplasia. So for almost three months I have tried feebly to function with the pain and know I’ve had major muscle atrophy from lack of use. This video and others I’ve watched from you have given me hope that I can turn this around w/o injections or surgery. Thank you thank you!
@justforwork7422 ай бұрын
Hahaha using the hip to do the hip exercises was amazing....this whole thing has been amazing. I had wished i found your program before my hip surgery. I got in a car accident while healing from my first hip surgery and then they found another labral tear and i legitimately have surgery scheduled and i am not doing it. theres no way...thank you so much for this. its life changing
@Lucy-lp9kv2 ай бұрын
I've just had hip arthroscopy for cam impingement and labral tear. Massive regret. I think I have just re-torn the labrum again already. I'm 11 days post op! Regret not doing more research and saying no to the surgery. My gut said not to do it but if I cancelled it would be years for another appointment.
@nostalgictarot57442 ай бұрын
I'm scheduled for hip labral repair surgery this month but I keep going back and forth if I should get the surgery done. I keep reading how it would get worse if I don't have it surgically repaired. I've been in PT for months but still have discomfort in that hip. It now aggravates my hip just when going for a short drive so I'm so confused about getting surgery or just see what happens if I don't.
@Lucy-lp9kv2 ай бұрын
@@nostalgictarot5744 make sure you don't have any muscle imbalances in your lower body first would be my advice.
@KathrynHotchkiss20 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing your story and progress.. I have been suffering thru hip dysplasia for months. Still working thru getting my muscles to strengthen and keeping my hip in place. I am 65 I have been an avid yoga and pickleball player for many years.. somewhere along the way I have had this happen. I am working with my PT and my DO stablize and doing the work… it is a long process and must be done every day.. and it also changes as our body does. I am thankful to hear Erica’s story that surgery is not the answer.. and that is the path I am on ... Thank you!
@z.l.burington1183Ай бұрын
It really is insane how much disinformation is pushed by the surgeons about these things. And yet, physical therapy works and you demystify exactly what it is doing and how to do it for different injuries and weaknesses. Two years ago I could barely sleep for an hour without waking up in pain, had horrible bursitis on both sides. I watched your videos looking for anything to help, did the leg lifting exercises, and within a month I was completely back to normal, the pain never came back. Now I am having QL pain on my right side so I have been following your exercise for that, and I have no doubt that within a few weeks I will be fully recovered. Thanks again!
@madeleinesutherland63233 ай бұрын
A very encouraging testimony emphasising the importance of 'starting' and 'keeping' a disciplined muscle exercise program! Nothing hard or stressful...just begin where you can...and stick with it, despite the frustration of it being a necessity, to enable walking! Overcoming the mental blockage and embracing these exercises as part of regular lifestyle is half the battle I think. Thank you Mark Hsu for the hope, help and instructions you share!❤
@joywingfield7083 ай бұрын
Very good interview. I have the healthy hips program but haven't been consistent in doing the work. Well, today I hurt my hip while playing with our young, energetic golden retriever. A new pain I've not had before. I will begin healthy hips program again and stay with it. I am hoping to do a major hike in September. I hope there's time to get strong enough for it. Thank you for your videos. This one is very informative.
@houseofonix94863 ай бұрын
I had the same diagnosis than her but, because I was too old (46) two hip surgeons told me I was not a candidate for the PAO but I needed to do a hip replacement!! I saw four chiropractors and a PT, apart from various MDs, but the only thing that relieved my pain have been these exercises.
@veronikabest4493 ай бұрын
Found your sight after my double hip replacement. Your exercises has helped me in strengthening the muscles.
@ItsMefromSnuffys3 ай бұрын
Thank you for your info and helping people realize that there may be a fix without surgery
@gergemall23 күн бұрын
My mom is 98 years old this week and has exercised her entire life. She told me if you don’t invest in your health daily don’t expect to remain healthy. God bless.
@persiffony28 күн бұрын
So glad I found you! I definitely want to avoid the surgery.
@irmaramirez1518Ай бұрын
Thank you. Im learning from you. I'm 69 I can't walk on my left leg. Is painful as I walk. They keep telling me I need surgery. I heard that we loose muscle. So i let it go. So now im trying to exercise to build muscle. So i pray that I will walk again.
@barbaraalbert56003 ай бұрын
Been told i need hip surgery three times now. We only have two. Thanks for how brave you are Matt, i plan on being ambulatory as long as I'm ambulating. Its About The Muscle. Thanks 👍
@halimaking36873 ай бұрын
In September of 2022, I had an EXTREME pain in my right hip that seem to come out of NOWHERE! It wasn’t until March of 2023 that I found out I had a hip labral tear. I’ve done PT and me being a dancer and a personal trainer, I kinda tried to do my own research on it and tried to heal myself. I’ve been inconsistent. Although now I can move way better than a year ago, there’s still pain there.. and now there’s a little pain on the left side but more by the groin, maybe an impingement… I will follow the movements that was shown and continue to be consistent!
@ppatrickp3 ай бұрын
Thank you for this valuable content. I'd like to share my personal experience with FAI and dysplasia: Former semi-prof athlete, diagnosed in my early 30s during the Covid pandemic, I underwent FAI removal surgery, which was costly and unfortunately ineffective. Post-surgery, my pain worsened significantly. Multiple MRIs revealed that the FAI wasn't properly removed, yet my doctor insisted the procedure was successful and claimed he couldn't offer further assistance. I'm grateful I didn't pursue the recommended PAO surgery. Living with this condition can be mentally devastating. Based on my experience, I'd like to share three key rules that have helped me: 1. Avoid pain medication - I've managed well with natural alternatives like curcumin and omega-3 supplements. 2. Keep exercising - It may seem counterintuitive, but movement is crucial. 3. Practice patience - Improvement takes time. Matt, I'm looking forward to starting your program now.
@DanceintheRaine6663 ай бұрын
You are so right about avoiding prescriptive or exogenous pharmacuetical pills...though this has a negative effect upon SOME/sadly MANY specialists, as they seem to disbelieve patients with freekishly high pain thresholds or who choose to employ ENDOGENOUS pharma (such as endorphins, oxyctocins, vassopressin and dopamine manufactured in your BRAIN (as well as positive thoughts and mental gymnastics) and strengthening EXERCISES to function DESPITE chronic disabling pain. I have experienced disbelief in various specialists who told me BECAUSE i am one of the rare FEMALES who did NOT break down and cry during the EXCRUCIATING physcial exams, they FORMERLY assumed I was exaggerating as purportedly "all women break down and CRY". When a "health care provider" arbitrarily JETTISONS this SIGNIFICANT datum...they can not POSSIBLY correctly diagnose you BECAUSE they have CHOSEN to DISBELIEVE FACTS. Pain which HABITUALLY wakes you up at night, or makes you VOMIT or PASS OUT is NOT TRIVIVIAL, nor should one's ATYPICAL emotional TOUGHNESS be misinterpreted as DISHONESTY. The APPOLOGIES I received YEARS and DECADES after misdiagnosing the MECHANICAL INJURY lead me to an exploratory surgery whereupon my surgeon ACCIDENTALLY severed my left psoas tendon during an attempted psoas tendon release...which INCREASED my weight-bearing pain, stressed my spine unnaturally by depriving me of symetricality in my spine AND added severe NERVE PAIN to my already the complicated and undiagnosed mechanical injury which was the ROOT CAUSE of the problem. I'm FILLED WITH GRATITUDE that I AVOIDED the hip replacement pushed on me 4 DECADES ago, and that I fought so hard to remain AMBULATORY (albeit with a cane for some years), confounding the experts who predicted I'd be in a wheelchair at 20 years old & that a full term pregnancy would KILL ME. My two MUCH BELOVED sons are proof that N of 1 experiments are far more MEANINGFUL than the "expert opinions" of arrogant specialists. Science could not ~ at the time I employed various intuitive protocols ~ prove the neurological reason WHY I thwarted the experts and accomplished the "impossible" feats I did...but RECENTLY tech has evolved to the point where neuroplasticity and other once "woo woo" theories are now proven by peer reviewed HARD SCIENCE. ❤
@Olof-mh4do3 ай бұрын
i think i have that. i cant even one go all fours without my hips wobbling and i aggravated a tear in my hip by sitting on the toilet. i did a plank and it ripped. dont want surgery but it seems like i cant do anything right now without making everything worse. i cant even contract any msucles in my low ab, inner thigh area
@whomeverwherever2 ай бұрын
PT’s are definitely not all equal. My pelvic bone rotates and nerves get pinched affecting my low left back, left hip, and sometimes groin/front of thigh. The pain is so intense, I can barely walk. When the pelvic bone is where it’s supposed to be, there is a constant burning pain, but my mobility is much better. Anyway, I tried another therapist here and the things he was having me do were making the pain and mobility issue way worse. I had better success after searching several YT vids, like the ones on this channel for one, so stopped going to PT. I think, one of the most frustrating things is when you get a PT that truly believes pain is just all in the head and you should be able to do anything just fine. Well, that’s not at all my case. I needed to first be sure my pelvic bone was where it was supposed to be, then I could focus on the strengthening/ mobility exercises. Unfortunately, the pain I have when it is aligned correctly still remains, however.
@ph59153 ай бұрын
It's all so true! I'm completely convinced that surgery should be the very last thing to do, if all else has failed, and typically would be the result of a catastrophic injury, like a pulverized hip from a severe car accident or something. I think the muscles / movement / exercise is the way to go. The thing is, the true recovery pain / period after such major hip surgery is going to be a lot more grueling, for a lot longer period, and having to learn to walk again? Sheesh! And it isn't even a high success rate! May as well try these exercises and stretches first and see how that goes. Then, as she had that later injury, it's also an important point that exercises should be kept up over a longer period, as in, the rest of one's life. Our bodies were evolved to move. I myself have fallen victim to that many times where "oh I feel better" and then stop...LOL.. It always comes back!
@melissalevine79063 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this inspiring video. I’ve been dealing with a rotated pelvis and it’s excruciating. I’m not sure which muscles need strengthening and lengthening. It’s so frustrating because apparently I have hEDS and should never been doing martial arts. I think I need to focus on the glutes so that’s where I’m going to start.
@daviddavid87212 ай бұрын
How can i recover to my femur head locked inside the acetabulum..my orthopedic surgeon want a surgery for my hip..is it possible not to do surgery?
@elisacohenusa3 ай бұрын
I’m not sure why my hips hurt sometimes. But I do know that when I do your exercises they feel better. It’s kind of like Tylenol. Dose dependent. The exercise effect wears off so I keep doing it.
@landking37423 ай бұрын
I follow every video and like but please can we do a video that relates to my issue hip dysplasia with bone on bone . I refuse a hip replacement because I don’t believe a prosthetic is as good as my natural hip
@AntonioLiberato082 ай бұрын
I can’t sit Indian style such as you are; the right inner groin thigh to knee is so tight and painful. Left side perfect why? Thank you so much!
@nobukazumikami54663 ай бұрын
You always mention, like a broken record or a parrot: ATM (Always Think Muscles). I totally agree with you. We need to keep functional muscles to keep mobility. Time to time, I get some knee pain (not bone to bone grinding pain). I use a foam roller all over my legs, then my knee pain goes away. It is actually not a knee pain, but tight muscles connected to my knee. ATM is especially important for residents at assisted-living homes. Those residents should not be encourage to sit and talk. They should be encourage to move their body.
@user-vk2ei5ze4yАй бұрын
Thank you for this video. Ive also heard about the PAO surgery but it sounds so insane 😭 and i want to avoid that of course But the main issue I have is that, when I do bridges and clamshells, I feel like my hip joint is trying to work / I feel like I am 'using' my hip joint. I know I have to use my glutes when doing those but they just irritate my hip joint and worsen my groin pain. Groin pain is my #1 symptom so this is so frustrating. Am I doing something wrong? Even my pt couldnt figure it out
@cindygaudet13902 ай бұрын
Okay wow, I am 67 DDD and something going on with my r hip, groin pain radiating down to my r knee diagonally. Also have shoulder issues. But I ended up in emerg 2 months ago because I as well suddenly couldn’t lift my right leg. I have been doing some of your exercises.lol I don’t think I have any muscles lol thanks again Matt!
@johannagracejordan71623 ай бұрын
Yes, Matt, but she saw you in person and you personally tended to her..some of us need that diagnosis, or assessment to see what is weak or strong from a n=knowledgeable one like yourself., otherwise, we go from cookie cutter to cookie cutter exercises/stretching presuming we have the right protocol when you can just get more inflamed which is what happened to me (I have your Happy Hips program). Wish you had skype visits so you could assess 😞
@Uprighthealth3 ай бұрын
If you're very flexible, focus your attention on strength! The Healthy Hips program workouts will help you identify what's weak. You don't NEED a savior. It might take a little more time, but the confidence you gain from the exploration process will serve you WELL in the long run. I promise!
@donnas43093 ай бұрын
So true, the PAO surgery does not last. Had PAO surgery at 13. Now at 40 things are bad again.
@Olof-mh4do3 ай бұрын
the slightest movement is making mine worse. i can barely go on all fours. trying a plank on m knees made my problems much worse. seems like i dont have any cards left to play.
@meghan32163 ай бұрын
PAOs gave me my life back. Still love your videos though! 🙂
@meghan32163 ай бұрын
Just went back to re-read the case study - wow that is an incredibly small sample size and from subjects having this procedure in the 1980's (when it was brand new). Interesting, but really we need a larger and updated long-term study for a major procedure like this.
@johnnunn86883 ай бұрын
Who else finds vocal fry, intensely annoying?
@sherryg18383 ай бұрын
Didn’t notice it, tbh.
@belle62193 ай бұрын
I do! It's become a popular way to speak, but I find it grating.
@johnnunn86883 ай бұрын
@@sherryg1838 you must be SO used to it.
@johnnunn86883 ай бұрын
@@belle6219 ‘grating’, good one.
@sherryg18383 ай бұрын
@@johnnunn8688 Not really.
@saachisrivastava62796 күн бұрын
Hey i want to contact you please let me know how I can reach out to you