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Bill McDonough's 71 years have been active: four years with the U.S. Navy, 22 years in a police department, and a stint teaching future electricians before retiring to Huntingdon Valley, where he rides his bike, walks in the park, and golfs.

At Rothman Orthopaedic Speciality Hospital, Matthew S. Austin performs a total hip replacement on Bill McDonough of Huntingdon Valley. McDonough was up and moving with the help of a walker only a few hours after the operation.
At Rothman Orthopaedic Speciality Hospital, Matthew S. Austin performs a total hip replacement on Bill McDonough of Huntingdon Valley. McDonough was up and moving with the help of a walker only a few hours after the operation.Read moreSTEPHANIE AARONSON / Philly.com

Bill McDonough's 71 years have been active: four years with the U.S. Navy, 22 years in a police department, and a stint teaching future electricians before retiring to Huntingdon Valley, where he rides his bike, walks in the park, and golfs.

But six months ago, the pain in his left leg sidelined him.

"I couldn't lift my leg to get on the bicycle without a shooting pain," McDonough said. "Getting in the car, I had to physically pick my leg up to step in."

McDonough decided he had pulled a muscle, but rest didn't make the pain go away.

"It reached the point where my quality of life was declining," said McDonough. "My life was on pause until I could take care of the pain."

McDonough's doctor sent him to an orthopedic specialist, who told him he was showing classic signs of osteoarthritis.

"Diagnosed with age," McDonough quipped.

The prescription: surgery to replace his degenerating hip joint.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 332,000 total hip replacements are performed each year in the United States.

Matthew S. Austin, director of joint-replacement services at Rothman Orthopaedic Specialty Hospital in Bensalem, performs more than 300 total hip replacements a year. He and McDonough allowed a reporter and photographer to see what happens during this increasingly common procedure.

The hip joint is made up of two parts: the socket in the pelvic bone and the ball at the top of the femur bone in the leg, known as the femoral head. Between those two parts is cartilage, tissue that cushions the bones and enables the joint to move easily.

With osteoarthritis, the cartilage deteriorates so badly bone grinds on bone, causing chronic pain.

McDonough is a typical patient for Austin, though in recent years the doctor has started to see an uptick in younger patients. Some have suffered wear and tear due to sports injuries, others' joints have worn out prematurely because of obesity.

"Over the last 15 years, the materials have gotten better," Austin said, "so the thought is that we can now give younger patients a much longer-lasting replacement."

Those materials create the "bearing" where the socket and ball fit together to fashion a movable joint. Austin prefers a metal cup to replace the socket, a plastic liner to act as the cartilage, and a ceramic ball for the femoral head.

"Since we started using a highly cross-linked polyethylene liner, wear rates have been very low," he said, "so we're hopeful that even young patients will be able to get one hip replacement and that would be it."

Austin makes a five-inch incision on the outside of McDonough's left leg. Once he can reach the joint, he dislocates the hip in one swift motion.

Using a sterile tool that looks almost like something you'd find at Home Depot, he saws through the femur in order to remove the damaged ball from its socket.

Before putting the implants into place, Austin cleans out the scarred bone and soft tissue along the socket. Then he takes a tool similar to a cheese grater to the bone that's left to create some bleeding.

"The implants have a porous surface that allows for bone ingrowth," said Michael Geissler, a nurse and director of perioperative services. "If there's no bleeding bone, the coating on the implants won't adhere properly." It takes a few months, he said, for the bone to grow into the new joint.

Next, a metal cup is "press-fit" into the socket. The plastic liner is snapped into the cup to create a smooth surface on which the new femoral head will glide.

Austin then hammers a metal stem about four or five inches into the femur. That is where the ceramic ball will be attached to form the new femoral head.

The next step is to test the new joint to make sure everything fits properly.

"The primary goal," Austin said, "is stability of the hip and making sure the implant won't dislocate."

He shifts the leg into different positions to make sure the new joint won't pop out under normal movement - and to be certain the metal stem holding the ball isn't too long.

"If the fitting is too long, you're going to impinge or stretch a nerve in the leg," Geissler said, "so now is the time to figure that out."

The secondary goal is to get the patient's leg lengths equal.

"Most people don't have equal leg lengths to start off with," Austin said. "So it's not always possible to get them exact, but within millimeters is a very attainable goal."

The last step is to inject antibiotics into the new joint and cleanse the area of any debris before closing the incision.

In just a half-hour, McDonough has his new hip.

McDonough was up and moving with the help of a walker only a few hours post-op. Though hip-replacement surgery once meant significant time immobilized, doctors now know that patients do better if they keep moving.

A physical therapist gave McDonough a list of exercises to do, in addition to walking, to strengthen the hip and restore movement.

"We did a study to see whether patients needed prolonged formal physical therapy after replacement, and we found that it's not necessary," Austin said. "So now we teach them the exercises and then give them a list to do at home."

Rothman patients are advised to follow an online exercise program for at least six weeks after surgery.

Austin defines successful surgery as one that gets a patient back to what he was doing before the pain took over his life. By that measure, he said, hip replacement has an excellent track record.

"If you look at the literature, about 98 percent of cases are successful." The unfortunate 2 percent suffer complications such as a blood clot, infection, or dislocated implant.

Within six weeks, McDonough was back to walking in the park without pain.

Now he has a new goal: keeping up with the new baby his daughter is expecting soon.

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@kelloshea