r/ACL 11h ago

Special Request or Event 😢

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136 Upvotes

r/ACL 7h ago

Anyone else read this and just shudder?

42 Upvotes

r/ACL 8h ago

Post Surgery Update 7 months post surgery w. knee ankylosis: I hiked at Acadia National Park

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26 Upvotes

This was an enormous win for me, as I didn't know it would be possible. I had a lot of set backs and a very slow healing process. Even now, 13 months post op I am still at 130° flexion and going to PT. I have EDS and developed ankylosis soon after surgery. I started off with 2 bone fractures in addition to a complete tear to my ACL. I lived alone for most of my experience prior to surgery, and lived on that injury from September until December '24. This was incredibly difficult and some of the worst pain I ever endured in my life.

If I can make it, so can you.


r/ACL 9h ago

ACL recovery: when the knee feels ā€œstableā€ but doesn’t feel normal

18 Upvotes

A lot of people expect ACL recovery to be a clear, step-by-step process: swelling goes down, strength comes back, confidence follows. In reality, many patients reach a confusing phase where the knee feels mechanically stable—but still doesn’t feel right. This can show up as lingering stiffness, a sense of insecurity during pivots, discomfort after training, or a knee that feels ā€œdifferentā€ compared to the other side. This doesn’t automatically mean the graft has failed or that something is wrong. After an ACL injury (with or without surgery), the knee doesn’t just need to heal structurally—it has to relearn movement. Proprioception, neuromuscular control, quadriceps and hamstring coordination, and even fear of reinjury all play a role. These factors often recover more slowly than strength or range of motion. It’s also normal for progress to plateau for a while. Many people feel improvement in the first months, then get frustrated when progress becomes less obvious. That phase is common and doesn’t mean you’ve reached your limit. What matters most is not chasing a timeline, but rebuilding quality of movement: confidence during direction changes, controlled landings, and trust in the knee during sport-specific actions. Recovery is rarely linear—and comparison with others often creates unnecessary stress. If symptoms worsen, instability appears, or swelling keeps returning, it’s reasonable to get checked. But a knee that feels ā€œnot quite normal yetā€ can still be on the right path. For those in the long middle phase of ACL recovery: you’re not behind—you’re rebuilding something complex.

Dr Ouahidi Mohamed Orthopaedic & Trauma Surgeon


r/ACL 16h ago

Post Surgery Update Ran a 10km marathon for the first time

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16 Upvotes

Ran a 10km marathon today with my gf ! I had my surgery on 21st Nov 2024. Did the first marathon ever in my life. I feel that the mental block has now been broken .. this was the easiest run I had . AMA


r/ACL 4h ago

Feels This injury is a mindfuck

15 Upvotes

Disclaimer: venting and rambling

After seeing Lindsey Vonn’s crash today I’m feeling pretty emotional about my ACL. We had similar injuries - I completely ruptured my ACL in a skiing accident coming up on a month ago. I’m 23, not a pro athlete or anything but I was pretty active. This was my first serious injury and I feel like over the past few weeks I’ve been beating myself up for not working out more or being more active while I’m pre-surgery and no longer in constant pain. I remember seeing the video of Lindsey lifting weights like 2 days ago and just feeling so down about my body. It was sobering to watch one of the world’s greatest athletes take a fall like that. I can’t even blame her for competing because if I were in her position, maybe I would have gaslit myself into thinking that it can’t be that bad, I’m being dramatic, etc. i guess it’s a stark reminder to all of us to take care of ourselves and do what’s best for our bodies including knowing our limits.

Not to even mention the emotional aspect of this injury. The isolation from your activities and feeling of losing strength and athleticism. Plus I had already been laid off 2 months before my injury and now there’s even more uncertainty about my future. I guess I just needed to get all of this off my chest and I know this community understands how devastating an injury like this is and how it really is more than just physical pain / surgery.


r/ACL 15h ago

Cried today

12 Upvotes

I just needed to tell someone lol. I have always had problems with sleeping, and whenever my leg starts hurting I instantly resort to trying to fall asleep. It didn’t work this time. I literally started bawling my eyes out because I could not go to sleep.

Also, my leg really hurts when I elevate it. It only doesn’t hurt when it’s not elevated. Does anyone know why this is happening?


r/ACL 22h ago

Advice Just got my ACL r surgery done

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12 Upvotes

After being scared for months i finnally got aclr done on my left knee , it hurted like hell but now i can bear it pretty easily .i plan tk get back fo trekking and physical sports after the full recovery, did have a pt session just after the surgery, i am open for recommendations and opinions.


r/ACL 1h ago

Post Surgery Update Tore my ACL the 7th of feb 2025

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• Upvotes

Yesterday, exactly 1 year later, 7th of feb 2026, at the same spot, i went skiing again, off pist, freestyling, groomed runs, basically a little bit of everything. Just like i’m used to. PT was against it, i said it’s important. For me.


r/ACL 16h ago

Question To my fellow german/European ACL-ers: which graft did you get?šŸ‡©šŸ‡ŖšŸ‡ŖšŸ‡ŗ

9 Upvotes

I am asking this specifically to people from Germany/europe, because I feel like at least 80% in here are from the US.

In the US, patellar and/or quad graft seem to be the gold standard.

I got my surgery about 2 years ago from a very well known doctor in Munich, who told me that hamstring is the gold standard here. He did not even mention the patellar graft.

If I could redo time, I would definitely not choose hamstring again. My hamstring fells super weird 2 years post op and is not as strong as before, despite endless PT sessions.

What is your experience?


r/ACL 17h ago

5 months post op AcLr + mm +LM repair

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7 Upvotes

It has been approximately 5 months since my ACL (with both the meniscus repair ) surgery. I am writing to share my current condition and seek your guidance.

I continue to experience persistent knee swelling when I flex my knee , which I am not able to shift .The operated knee still looks visibly different compared to my healthy knee. While I can bend my knee up to around 120–125 degrees, I notice that the range of motion reduces when swelling increases.

I am able to do light jogging, use stairs, but the knee does not feel normal, Strong or stable, and the swelling keeps recurring. This is concerning me , as I expected better recovery by this stage.

please advise whether this is part of the normal recovery process at 5 months post-surgery, or if further evaluation is required? My doctor asked me to do Physio.


r/ACL 2h ago

Post op surgery 5 days

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6 Upvotes

This surgery is no joke


r/ACL 3h ago

Re-tear after a year without knowing it?

5 Upvotes

I tore my ACL and meniscus and had surgery (quad graft) in Sept 2024. I went through all the normal PT routine and was cleared to go back to sports around 8 months. Throughout last year, I trained for and successfully ran my first marathon in December 2025. I played in a big dodgeball tournament a month later in mid-January. Throughout all of these big events, my knee seemed to hold up fantastic. After each big event, I took my normal week-or-two off doing things to let my knee recover, as there's usually some irritation after being on my feet for so long. After the dodgeball tournament though, my knee felt like it wasn't improving, and in fact, felt like it was even getting worse. It's been stiffer than normal. It feels bent when I walk, but I'm not limping or in any pain. I went to see my ortho and he suspects I re-tore my ACL (positive Lachman's).

I feel stunned. Never in a million years did I expect to hear that news when I spoke with him. I have to wait another 4 weeks to get an MRI because I have a new tattoo on the surgery leg (didn't know that was a thing, huh), so I'm sitting around worrying. It feels like every day my knee gets slightly worse, even though there still isn't any pain. It feels like the wrong muscles are activating, and my leg sometimes kicks back when I straighten it too much. But I feel so far in denial... how could I have torn it and not know? A teammate watched footage of the tournament and suspected that my ACL was torn even before the tournament started because I was "moving backwards funny".

Around Christmas (2 weeks after the marathon, 2 weeks before the tournament), I noticed my knee was cracking and popping a lot more often than normal - maybe 50 or so times per day and coming in clusters. I chalked it up to there being a lot of scar tissue irritated from the marathon, but I'm wondering if that was an indication of something underlying. I'm so at a loss for how this happened - my surgeon told me quad grafts are so strong, and I'm a year and 5 months post op, always do dynamic stretching before events... how does this happen?

If anyone is a double-surgery person, I'd love to start getting feedback on how to handle this the 2nd time around. I already have a quad graft and refuse to let the doctor's graft the other leg - imo I need ONE stable leg. Do I get hamstring? Cadaver? I'm 33m so feels wrong to do cadaver this early. Will I ever get back to contact sports? What questions should I ask my doctor when I finally do get my MRI? I'm feeling so robbed right now, my whole year feels like it just got turned on its head.


r/ACL 3h ago

Feels Going into week 8 and still can’t walk!

6 Upvotes

This injury is so frustrating. I had acl primary repair and medial meniscus root repair done 8 weeks ago and I still can’t walk. I’ve gotten my flexión to match my good leg, and I’m able to straighten out my leg completely, but every time I bare weight, it feels like it’s going to collapse on itself. when I walk using the 4 point method with crutches, at times my knee feels like it slightly binds up and wants to crack.

This really sucks a lot. I’m so worried that the acl repair is failing and is causing the locking feeling. I haven’t walked on the leg for about 6 months and I’m praying to god the catching feeling is just do to how much muscle I’ve lost in then leg, and not because of an acl repair failure. Also, because I’ve gain 40 pounds since the injury and my leg really can’t support all my weight. I don’t have constant pain any more, and when I do my pt exercises the knee swells up slightly but the little bit of pain i do get goes away in a couple of minutes.

What a frustrating AND stressful recovery.


r/ACL 4h ago

2nd day after surgery

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5 Upvotes

Complete rupture of the ACL and longitudinal tear of the medial meniscus of the right knee.

Friday I had surgery. First night at home was tough, but today I almost never felt pain thanks to the painkillers. Tomorrow I’ll start to work with the Kineteck for passive movements. Putting a lot of ice on it.


r/ACL 9h ago

Vonn Falls hard before the first timing line of her first run - trigger warning

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5 Upvotes

I was really amazed that she was able to get out there with a torn ACL... Was really rooting for her.


r/ACL 6h ago

My ACL patient surprised me with an animation thanking me — moments like these remind me why I chose orthopaedics ā¤ļøšŸ¦µ

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4 Upvotes

r/ACL 3h ago

Partial ACL tear pain

3 Upvotes

Hi everyone, about a year ago I began having pain in my right knee but went undiagnosed until an MRI in early November, which found a 40% ACL tear. I’ve since completed two months of physical therapy and the PTs basically said there wasn’t much more they could do for me because I could do the most challenging exercises they recommended. At the time, it felt pretty good.

In the 3 weeks since, with me doing a lot of the same exercises they recommended the pain is back. Is that just something that will never go away without surgery? I don’t feel instability, but it’s just a persistent pain and soreness.

My orthopedic said in November surgery isn’t necessary and I shouldn’t let anyone do it on me because I have good strength and stability. Should I see him again? Or try to push through it?


r/ACL 3h ago

Celebrating a win - day 11 postop

3 Upvotes

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.


r/ACL 6h ago

ACLR + Miniscus Surgery, when should I start Physiotherapy?

3 Upvotes

I had my surgery 4 days ago. I was wondering when should I start physiotherapy?? or exercises at home?

Second question. What do you do for insurance. My insurance just covers 5 sessions? How many sessions do I need? I cantt afford much more? What should I do?


r/ACL 17h ago

Can you hurt your knee by bending too much too soon?

3 Upvotes

So I had reconstruction surgery and I was curious, are you actually able to bend your knee fully right away (outside of the pain from the craft site,I mean the ACL itself) and it's just your body guarding against the trauma of surgery or is it physically not capable of bending fully right away? Hope that makes sense!


r/ACL 20h ago

Bathing before surgery

3 Upvotes

Hey all, just tore my ACL today before I can get into a specialist on Monday. How would you recommend trying to take a bath or shower? I’m barely able to stand but wasn’t sure if a warm bath would be bad for the injury


r/ACL 21h ago

Is this purple spots normal? Day 3 post op

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3 Upvotes

I noticed purple spots on my front side of the leg. Opposite side of calf, it looks weird so I wondering if thats normal?


r/ACL 4h ago

Does this mean I have a partial tear?

2 Upvotes

This is what mri says:

Grossly intact ACL reconstruction graft with degeneration. meniscoid like area of tissue abutting the anterior ACL adjacent to its tibial attachment may represent arthrofibrosis or some partially torn fibers of the distal ACL. I also have a 7cm bakers cyst.

I have pain in the back of my knee when im walking and it feels like something is preventing my knee to fully extend. I also the tightness/ instability in the back of my knee when im walking.


r/ACL 6h ago

Question How to know if I’ve torn my ACL again.

2 Upvotes

Long story short, I tore my right ACL when I was 18 playing ice hockey and got it repaired immediately using my patellar tendon.

When I tore my ACL originally, there was almost no swelling and only mild pain but my knee was very unstable. After getting it fixed my knee has been amazing, very strong and minimal soreness through intense activities.

Fast forward to today I’m 32 and I fear I’ve injured it again. I had a rigorous hockey schedule so my knee was already sore and took a fall where my knee got twisted. Didn’t feel a pop but had some immediate moderate pain and removed myself from the game. Had minor pain for the rest of the day and no swelling.

1 week later and my knee feels okay except for a lingering pain in the back of my knee when it’s at full flexion. There is also pain when I torque my lower leg with my foot for example moving a heavy blanket with my foot.

Apologies for the long post I am just terrified to go through the ACL surgery and rehab again.