knee pain

Poser

WKR
Joined
Dec 27, 2013
Messages
5,800
Location
Durango CO
I would emphasize strengthening your hamstrings; that will really help stabilize your knee. I also find doing banded adductors very beneficial.

I found this to be beneficial as well. Good Mornings, uncomfortable (and downright brutal once the weight gets heavy) as they are, seemed to me to be the most beneficial as you can really stretch the hamstrings under load in a mechanically disadvantaged manner.
 
Joined
Aug 15, 2024
Messages
60
Lots of good advice for exercises and strengthening. Need to get an MRI to know what is wrong. It will also be helpful to monitor your knee issue through the years to have an MRI now. I have had torn meniscus in both knees, one I had surgery and a terrible recovery over 2 years. The other I felt tear and pop, got an MRI and confirmed complex tear meniscus and I rehabbed it and let it heal itself and it has been fine. Just remember whatever the MRI shows you don’t necessarily need surgery and most orthopedics you see will recommend surgery because that is all they know…tears and other injuries can heal and surgery doesn’t always fix things so consider all your options and get a second or third opinion if you don’t like what you hear. Good luck
 

Wolfshead

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Aug 10, 2022
Messages
208
A meniscus is made of cartilage.
Cartilage does not heal. Once torn it is torn.
One can live with torn cartilage, but chances are that it will eventually become more of a problem. Yes you can go years with it and rehab the muscles around it to stabilize the injury and be fine, as I said for years.
But again once cartilage is torn it does not grow back together.
 

EdP

WKR
Joined
Jun 18, 2020
Messages
1,498
Location
Southwest Va
Working it without knowing what is causing your problem is foolish in my opinion. As others have said, you need to see an ortho and get an MRI. There is just no substitute for proceeding from a base of knowledge.
 

funkafied

FNG
Joined
Jan 9, 2023
Messages
25
Location
Montana
Get an MRI. I injured my knee and thought it was a bad sprain. Turns out I tore my ACL. Kept hunting, skiing, playing basketball on it and eventually tore my meniscus. Doctor said it is very common for a single tear to go unnoticed and lead to multiple tears in the knee as load is shifted to areas it wasn't meant to be. Just my 2c from someone looking at a second round of knee surgery! Good luck with the hunt!
 
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