- Thread Starter
- #21
Don't work in ortho. But, taking a looking at the 1.5k per year subscription I get through work, there is not good evidence to support taking either approach. The risk is that knee instability causes you to injure more parts of the knee.
A discussion with both a surgeon and a physical therapist would be your best bet to understand your particular case. My inclination would be to give it 2 months of PT and see if it recovers to a notable extent or not. This approach could cost you a hunting season, but it could also save the season and avoid surgery. Some of it will depend on how unstable your knee is, this is a question for ortho. A grade 2 looks to fall in the area that might need surgery or might heal on its own.
That is kind of the plan. I've had a partially torn ACL for 36 years now and I knew it would not last forever. I think I'm going to try and get thru hunting season with a lot of PT and then bite the bullet and get a new ACL in the fall. I had this conversation with a surgeon about 10 years ago and we landed on, it was working and stable so it was up to me, but the one I had would probably not be good forever if I wanted to remain very active. I guess it's time to pay the piper for living hard on my body.
This all might change if the US Dr tells me my ACL is totally shot right now and will not be stable enough to hunt. Then I get it done as soon as I get home.