Post-Surgical Rehab

What Is the Importance of Rehab After Surgery?

No matter what type of surgery you’re recovering from—from joint replacements to a heart valve replacement—undergoing rehab after surgery with a physical therapist or occupational therapist is essential to maximize your physical potential, accelerate your recovery, and help you get the most out of the highly skilled interventions provided by your surgical team.

No matter how minimally invasive a surgical procedure is, it still causes trauma to your body. While your body is healing, you’ll likely experience challenges like post-operative pain, inflammation, and swelling. You may also have newfound difficulty with daily tasks like dressing, standing, and walking. You may even have specific instructions from your surgeon on things to do or things not to do in order to protect your healing surgical site and prevent complications.

For example, if you’ve had surgery to correct a broken bone in your leg, your doctor may tell you to be “non-weight bearing” or “partial weight bearing” for several weeks. If you’ve had a hip replacement, your doctor may require you to follow “posterior hip precautions.” If you’ve undergone surgical repair of a torn rotator cuff, your doctor will want you to restrict movement at your shoulder, often for as long as 4-6 weeks.

What do these precautions and restrictions mean? How can you learn to function in your daily life while complying with such restrictions? How might these restrictions affect your body (e.g., weakening of muscles due to disuse), and how can you minimize, prevent, or reverse these effects?

These are important questions and further show why working with a physical therapist or occupational therapist for rehab after surgery is so critical.

Above all, post-surgical rehabilitation is an evidence-based, drug-free, and non-invasive way to regain your strength, balance, flexibility, and function following any type of surgery. Research even shows that physical therapy can reduce the amount of pain medication a person needs to use!

What to Expect From Post-Surgical Rehabilitation With a Physical Therapist

Physical therapist and occupational therapists are experts of the human body who diagnose and treat a wide number of conditions. Occupational therapists are experts in tasks of daily living, particularly involving the upper extremity around the elbow, wrist and hand. In post-surgical rehabilitation, physical therapists and occupational therapists are key team members who can implement plans of care with the goal to:

  • Reduce pain, swelling, and inflammation
  • Accelerate wound healing and minimize scarring
  • Improve circulation, range of motion, and strength
  • Restore your functional mobility (your ability to move around in your environment and participate in activities, such as climbing stairs, getting in and out of a car, or opening a tight or new jar)

Depending on your unique needs, a physical therapist or occupational therapist may also help you adapt to new changes in your body or learn how to use certain tools and adaptive equipment (such as crutches, incentive spirometers, or braces).

At your first post-surgical evaluation, your physical or occupational therapist will review your medical history and any relevant documentation from your surgeon. He or she will examine your surgical site, as well as other aspects of your health including strength, balance, blood pressure, heart rate, pain level, range of motion, and cognition. Finally, you and your therapist will go over your goals.

Based on all this information, your physical therapist or occupational therapist will design and implement a customized plan of care and employ a variety of exercises and techniques to help you achieve your goals:

  • Manual therapy such as joint mobilizations, active release technique, soft tissue mobilization or scar massage
  • Therapeutic exercises
  • Gait and balance training
  • Neuromuscular re-education
  • Aquatic therapy
  • Ice and heat
  • Dry needling
  • Patient education
  • Therapeutic ultrasound
  • Electrical stimulation

Your physical therapist or occupational therapist will periodically make reports on your progress and adjust your plan of care as necessary to ensure you’re progressing well. When your rehabilitation program is complete, your therapist will write a summary of your care and give you instructions and recommendations about things which will help you continue to progress (e.g., nutrition, stress management, sleep, exercise program, etc.).

How Long Does Physical or Occupational Therapy Rehabilitation Take?

The amount of time you’ll spend in physical therapy rehabilitation depends on many complex factors, including age, overall health, type of surgery, and whether you experienced any complications.

In many cases, a person goes from the operating room to the rehab room within a matter of days or even hours. Common protocols range from two to seven times per week and for two weeks to three months or more. You may need physical therapy more frequently early on in the recovery period and less frequently as you go on. Therapy can happen in a hospital, an inpatient rehab facility, an outpatient clinic, or even in your own home.

No matter what your unique protocol looks like, patience and consistency is the key while you allow your body to heal.

A Physical and Occupational Therapist Can Help You Before and After Your Surgery

Strong evidence shows that consulting with a physical or occupational therapist both before and after surgery can reduce your risk of complications and drastically improve your overall outcome. Even just a few pre-operative sessions can be effective for helping you prepare your body for the operation.

Do you have surgery ahead of you? Contact Us today at Lake City, Florence, Columbia, Spartanburg & Camden, SC Clinics to set up an appointment and learn more about how we can help you get the most out of your procedure.


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