I am 54 today. When I was a freshman in college I blew out the medial meniscus the first time I played on astroturf. Back then astroturf was nothing more than indoor/outdoor carpet over concrete. I played the rest of the season being told I stretched a ligament. They put a brace and tape on me and sent me back out there. During spring practice I started to have an issue where that leg would give out and I occasionally fell because of it. I had surgery that summer and the next two summers within the one year anniversary.When I was 18 I was playing highschool softball and after playing for 8 years already, I had to have my knees looked at my senior year. I was told the meniscus in my knees was beginning to thin and they could see a small tear beginning to form in my right knee. At age 18 hearing i would have to have both knees worked on if i wanted to play college ball kinda scared me so i opted out in hopes of preserving what meniscus i had left. Well, I never thought I'd be doing as much physical activities after softball but I moved away from home and am now starting to get into western hunting a bit which as most of us know means lots of up hill/down hill hiking and uneven terrain with weight on our backs. Now 24 years old and starting to hurt a bit more than i used to i'm starting to think maybe its time to have my knees looked at and have at least my right knee worked on because descending off the mountain especially with weight is almost too much to bare anymore unless i go snail pace on the trail which is frustrating for me.
I'm just curious if anybody on here has had the surgery and saw the difference that makes the surgery worth it in the first place? Or if i should just take some good anti-inflammatory meds with me, knee brace/wrap, and a DBAP attitude + doing some PT at home during the off season to strengthen my hips, knees, and ankles. Was recovery as easy and quick as they make it sound? Did you try something different that worked instead of going the surgery route? Either way, I'm gonna hunt and keep on keepin on regardless. Probably gonna end up with some hellactious arthritis in my knees and end up needing a total knee replacement by my 40's but hell at this point just add it to the list! Thanks in advance for any info!
Fast forward to about 30 and I started having some pain and went to the ortho and he told me yes I did tear it again but he couldn't guarantee another surgery would make me feel any better. He asked if I could live with the pain and gave me the advice that if the pain isn't unbearable, the knee locks or gives out then suck it up because there is no guarantee it will be any better.
Do as much PT to avoid surgery as possible because once the surgery is done there is no going back.
I at 38 took up Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and was very athletic winning the 2009 BJJ Pan Ams at 43 just 7 months before having a widow maker heart attack. Last fall I went on my first elk hunt in colorado and we hunted down and up a 1000 ft vertical in less than a 1/3rd of a mile with 40lb pack and had no issues other than having to rest when my heart rate got up to 196 BPM. It hadn't been that high since my heart attack. No issues with the knees. I trained with yoga, a basic kettle bell workout, backpack cardio of 2-4 miles with 40-75 lbs 3-4 days a week before work and an ungodly amount of step ups which strengthened the knee's.
Good luck with whatever you do!