Understanding the root of your hip pain starts here.

Hip Pain That’s Stopping Your Daily Life? Let’s Fix It the Right Way.

Hi, I’m Dr. Gowtham Chowdary.

Whether it’s early knee pain, arthritis, ligament injuries, or long-term stiffness, I help you understand what’s actually happening and what can improve it.

“I feel pain in the groin while walking.”

“I can’t sit cross-legged like before.”

“My hip feels stiff after I wake up.”

“The pain goes to my thigh or knee.”

What’s Causing Your Hip Pain?

Hip pain is rarely “just hip pain.” Most people tell me:

Your hip pain may be due to:

Hip arthritis (wear-and-tear)

AVN (Avascular Necrosis)

Labral tears / impingement (FAI)

Hip bursitis / tendon issues

Fractures (especially after falls)

Post-injury stiffness or early arthritis

“We find the real source of pain not just what the scan shows.”

My Approach to Hip Problems

I don’t start with surgery.

If physiotherapy, lifestyle changes, or injections can help, we begin there.

I explain everything in simple words.

You’ll know why the hip hurts and what each option means.

We choose the least aggressive solution that works

Surgery is discussed only if it truly improves your quality of life.

Treatments I Use for Hip Problems

Conservative Treatment First

We start with non-surgical methods to reduce pain, improve hip mobility, and help you walk and move comfortably again.

Hip Arthroscopy / Labral Care (Selected Cases)

A minimally invasive procedure used in specific hip problems—usually in younger/active patients—when pain comes from labral tears or impingement.

Hip Replacement (THR)

When arthritis or AVN has advanced and daily life is limited, hip replacement can significantly reduce pain and restore walking and function.

Revision Hip Replacement (Complex Cases)

Revision surgery is done when a previous hip replacement fails—due to loosening, wear, instability, fracture, or suspected infection—and needs careful planning.

Pain affects sleep or daily walking

Stiffness keeps increasing

You limp regularly or avoid movement

Scans show advanced arthritis / collapse (AVN)

Conservative treatments failed

When Should You Consider Surgery?
You might need surgery when:
If none match, we avoid surgery.
If some match, we discuss whether surgery will

A Real Story From My Clinic

Real patient journeys showcasing how precision-driven treatment and compassionate care lead to lasting recovery.

Frequently Asked Questions
Here are the questions patients ask me the most — yours might be one of them.
Do I need a hip replacement now?

Not always. A hip replacement is usually considered when pain and stiffness are consistently limiting your daily life—walking, stairs, getting up from a chair, sleep—and when conservative treatment (physio, medication, lifestyle changes, injections in selected cases) hasn’t helped enough.
Also, the decision depends on your X-ray/MRI stage, how much movement is restricted, and whether the joint damage is advanced. If you can still function well and pain is manageable, we often continue non-surgical care and monitor.

AVN (Avascular Necrosis) depends heavily on the stage.

  • In early stages, progression can sometimes be slowed and symptoms improved with activity modification, medications, and targeted management—and in selected cases, joint-preserving procedures may be discussed.

  • In advanced stages (collapse/arthritis changes), AVN is usually not reversible, and a hip replacement often becomes the most reliable option to restore function and relieve pain.
    The key is early diagnosis and staging, because treatment options change a lot from early to late AVN.

Most people start walking with support very early (often within a day, depending on your plan and overall health).
Typical recovery looks like this:

  • First 2–6 weeks: steady improvement in walking, stairs, daily activities with physiotherapy

  • 6–12 weeks: better strength, longer walking tolerance, more normal routine

  • 3–6 months: significant recovery for most patients (strength and confidence continue improving)
    Full recovery varies with age, fitness, and rehab consistency—but the goal is safe mobility first, then strength and endurance.

Yes—quite often. Lower back problems (like disc issues or nerve irritation) can refer pain to the buttock, groin, thigh, or even the knee, and can feel like “hip pain.”
A simple clue:

  • Hip joint pain commonly feels deep in the groin and worsens with hip rotation.

  • Back/nerve pain often comes with shooting pain, tingling, numbness, or pain that changes with sitting/standing posture.
    That’s why a proper clinical exam is important—to confirm whether the pain is from the hip, spine, or both before choosing treatment.

If you still have a doubt, just reach out—I’m here to help.
You don’t have to decide on surgery today.
 You just have to decide to understand what’s happening.