knee pain

jigkingg

FNG
Joined
Jan 10, 2025
Messages
3
Im 23 6’1 170lbs and in pretty good shape, messed up my knee bad in high school but kept playing football and hunting through it never got it checked as it was a minor ache on my right knee under the right side of the kneecap. After this last WY muley hunt hard hiking for 4 days didnt feel any pain the entire trip until the second I got up from my seat on the plane. Pain was pretty bad for 2 or 3 days I got a good brace which made it a little better. Im planning a elk hunt with my dad for this year if he draws his bull tag and i’ll have a cow tag and want to find some workouts that can help strengthen up my knee for a couple heavy pack outs. Dont want to risk my knee acting up after 5-6 days of hunting then having to pack out 2 elk. Could be stupid but I dont know if it had anything to do with the plane making it worse usually I drive but this year it was not an option.
 

Poser

WKR
Joined
Dec 27, 2013
Messages
5,697
Location
Durango CO
I had what seemed like a minor knee injury -a little tight, slightly swollen, that got compounded significantly by a long flight where my knee was locked into the same position for hours. Turned out to be a torn meniscus which ultimately did not require surgery, but did take some moths to recover from.

My advice is to first see what's going o with your knee which, no real way around it, you need an MRI.

I did not follow any of the conventional protocols beyond giving the knee about 2 months of solid rest. Once the inflammation got manageable and I had the mobility, I started squatting 3x a week starting with with an empty barbell and took 10 lbs jumps up to the mid 200s and the dropped to 5# jumps. Some of these sessions were verty uncomfortable, a little off camber, a few were ugly, but running that stres- recovery-adapation cycle got me back in the game within 2 months.

I also took quite a few supplements: Boswellia, Turmeric, Fish oil, boron, magnesium glycinate, glucosamine ad a few others.

Surgeons aren't doing much for torn meniscus these days unless you have a piece that is prone to interfering with your knee and causing it top lock up. That being said, the meniscus gets very little blood flow and is largely reliant on synovial fluid to heal it which takes time -no way around it. Part of the idea behind the supplements is improve the quality of the synovial fluid.

The good news is that it is January and assuming that you don't need ACL surgery or similar, you should have plenty of time to get your kee in order for the Fall, but you need to start with a Dr's appointment.
 
Joined
Oct 14, 2023
Messages
1,623
Location
Houston (adjacent) TX
I was in the same boat as the guy above me except mine was torn and interfering with my knee function (locking in place or “popping” during range of motion). Constantly had fluid in it and sometimes swollen. Got it scoped and in 4-6 months I was back to running for exercise. Ended up having problems later on that weren’t from the surgery but had to quit running for exercise due to it.
 

Deli

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Apr 17, 2020
Messages
170
I was in the same boat. I recommend knees over toes, bulletproof knees, and slowly transitioning (took a few years) to "barefoot" shoes. Never paid for any subscriptions as most of it could be found online or on YouTube. These pretty much fixed my back, hip, knee, and plantar fasciitis pain. It's something you need to work on almost everyday though.
 
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