When knee or hip arthritis becomes severe, patients and families in Dhaka often feel stuck. They may have tried pain medicines, physiotherapy, and injections, but walking and daily work remain difficult. At that point, people begin searching online for a joint replacement doctor in Dhaka and asking friends for recommendations.
In my practice, I try to bring the decision back to a simple goal: choose a doctor and a team that can assess the real diagnosis, explain options clearly, and guide you through a safe treatment pathway. Joint replacement is not only an operation. It is a full care process, from evaluation to rehabilitation.
This article is general education for Bangladeshi readers. It is not personal medical advice.
First, confirm whether replacement is actually needed
Many patients assume that pain automatically means joint replacement. That is not always true.
When I evaluate patients with hip or knee pain, I look for:
- where the pain is felt and what movements trigger it
- how much the pain limits walking, stairs, prayer posture, or standing
- whether there is stiffness, deformity, swelling, or instability
- whether there are “mechanical” symptoms like locking or giving way
- whether the hip, spine, or foot mechanics are contributing
Some problems are treatable without replacement, including selected tendon problems, meniscus issues, bursitis, or referred pain from the back. A good joint replacement surgeon will still take time to evaluate these possibilities.
What a joint replacement doctor should explain clearly
Before you choose a joint replacement doctor in Dhaka, I suggest you look for clarity in these areas.
Diagnosis and severity
The doctor should be able to explain:
- what the actual diagnosis is (for example osteoarthritis, avascular necrosis, inflammatory arthritis, fracture-related damage)
- whether the joint damage is mild, moderate, or severe
- what imaging shows and how it matches your symptoms
Non-surgical options
A trustworthy consultation does not rush to surgery. The doctor should discuss non-surgical care when it is still appropriate, such as:
- structured strengthening and physiotherapy
- weight management
- activity modification
- medication options under proper supervision
- selected injections in suitable cases
Even if replacement is likely, optimizing strength and medical fitness before surgery can improve outcomes.
Surgical options and the “why”
If surgery is recommended, the doctor should explain why replacement is needed and what the realistic goals are. The goal is usually improved function and reduced arthritis pain. It is not a guarantee of a perfect joint, and it is not a promise that all pain disappears instantly.
Questions to ask during your consultation in Dhaka
Patients in Bangladesh sometimes feel shy about asking questions. I encourage patients to ask, because clear communication reduces fear and improves decision-making.
Here are practical questions:
- What is my diagnosis and how severe is it?
- Are there still non-surgical options worth trying properly?
- If replacement is needed, is partial or total replacement relevant in my case?
- What are the main risks in my situation (for example diabetes, anemia, obesity, smoking, heart disease)?
- What is the expected recovery pathway and timeline?
- How will pain control, wound care, and physiotherapy be handled after discharge?
- What is the plan if stiffness or swelling becomes a problem?
