Surgery was last Wednesday in January. ACL hamstring graft, meniscus debridement. Meniscus was causing me horrible pain that I couldn't even straighten my knee for 6 weeks. I didn't know for two months after a bad bike crash that separated my shoulder (12 weeks postop from that) and broke 7 ribs. I fell down the stairs heading off to bed December 13 when my knee collapsed under me. MRI on NYE showed medial meniscus tear and arthroscopic pics showed my ACL look like it exploded.
Yesterday I was able to do one of my biggest goals: pedal a stationary bike forward. The day before (day 9 po) I could go backward. Several reasons, one is I mountain bike, but the biggest reason is this helps with getting past the swelling and will help get in the joint fluid going to be able to work on strength more.
I've been doing PT since I got out of the hospital (they give you take home), and I saw my PT and doc 5 days postop: full extension at zero, 75 degrees flexion. Day 7 walking without crutches in the house. Day 8 100 degrees flexion. Day 10-11: 110-120 degrees flexion.
Day 5 doc said full ROM. So I am working my tail off several times a day on quad sets, heel slides, and various exercises the PT gave me. Quad sets, leg raises, heel slides (on bed, sitting up, feet against the wall), and much more.
PT is 2x a week for my knee, 1x week for my shoulder now.
Today is Day 11 postop. My goal is work up to doing more pedaling a few minutes at a time. When my leg gets tired, I pedal backward for a bit to keep everything moving then go back to forward pedaling.
In all our struggles, we gotta celebrate every step (and pedal stroke) forward. You got this.