Arthritis effects joints like the knee or hip, but not the middle of bones like the thigh.
Hip dysplasia can cause a limp, constant and/or debilitating pain, arthritis, and impaired mobility later in life.
Tendinitis has been associated with inflammatory arthritis, acute trauma, and overuse syndromes, women are more commonly affected than men and it tends to affect younger patients. So if it is associated with arthritis which is the main cause for a hip replacement it could. But between arthritis and hip replacement there can be some Non surgical steps that can prevent the need for hip replacement.
yes
The sacrum articulates with the hip bones of the pelvis.
Yes, bilateral hip arthritis can be excruciating. If the arthritis is so severe that mobility is limited, the doctor may recommend a hip replacement surgery.
The hip is susceptible to damage from a number of diseases and disorders, including arthritis, traumatic injury, avascular necrosis, cerebral palsy, or Legg-Calve-Perthes (LCP) disease in young patients.
It is infective arthritis of the hip joint
Osteoporosis, and/ or arthritis.
The hip bones in snakes (and in humans) are called the pelvis.
Arthritis does not effect a chromosome.
Arthritis is a condition, not an illness, or a contagious or infectious disease. Therefore, no one can 'pass' arthritis onto anyone else. Arthritis affects the bones.