What Happens
If you have a sudden (acute)
anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury, you generally
know when it happens. You may feel or hear a pop and the knee may give out,
causing you to fall. The knee swells and often is too painful or unstable to
continue any activity.
An ACL injury can cause small or medium tears of the ligament, a
complete tear of the ligament (rupture), a separation of the ligament from the
upper or lower leg bone (avulsion), or a separation of the ligament and part of
the bone from the rest of the bone (avulsion fracture). When any of these
occur, the lower leg bone moves abnormally forward on the upper bone, with a
sense of the knee giving out or buckling.
When the ACL ligament tears, the blood vessels around the ligament
tear and blood fills the knee joint, causing swelling. If you see a health
professional immediately, he or she may not be able to examine the knee
thoroughly because of the swelling.
Other parts of the knee can be injured at the same time. These may
include one of the pads that act as cushions between the two leg bones (menisci
), another knee ligament (medial
collateral ligament
or
lateral
collateral ligament
), or the dense tissue that covers the ends of bones
(cartilage
). The bones of the knee joint may also be
broken (fractured).
Diagnosis may not be done at the time of injury. Sometimes people
think the injury is not serious, especially if the knee gets better in a few
days. In this case, or if the diagnosis is missed during the initial
examination, the injury may develop into a long-lasting and recurrent (chronic)
ACL
deficiency, in which the knee moves abnormally and gives way
occasionally. This can potentially cause progressive damage to the joint,
including
osteoarthritis. However, not everyone with an ACL
injury develops a chronic ACL deficiency.
The course of an ACL injury depends on:
- The condition of the ACL before this injury,
including prior injuries, partial tears, ACL deficiency, and degenerative
changes due to age.
- The general condition and health of all of your
knee structures prior to this injury.
- The amount of damage or
injury to the ACL. Injuries to the ACL are usually grouped into
grade I, II, or III sprains (tears) according to the
amount of damage.
- Additional injuries to the knee joint, such as to
the
cartilage or
menisci, or to bones in the knee.
- Your
age, how active you are, and how committed you are to treatment and
rehabilitation.
- The time of diagnosis. If the ACL diagnosis is not
made soon after the injury, the knee may be further damaged with use.
People with minor ACL injuries usually begin treatment with a
physical rehabilitation program. Rehabilitation exercises build strength and
flexibility in the muscles on the front of the thigh (quadriceps) and
strengthen and tighten the muscles in the back of the thigh (hamstrings). You
may use crutches for a short time. Although knee braces may be used to
stabilize the knee immediately after injury, they are not usually used
long-term. Most people return to their normal activities after a few weeks of
rehabilitation.
More serious ACL injuries may require several months of
rehabilitation or surgery followed by several months of rehabilitation to
regain your knee strength, knee stability, and range of motion. You may use
crutches or special knee braces, and it may take several months to a year until
you can return to your previous level of activity. The rehabilitation program
is intensive—many people think of it as having a second job.
Surgical techniques and rehabilitation programs used today
generally are successful. Between 80% and 90% of people who have ACL surgery
have favorable results, with reduced pain, good knee function and stability,
and a return to normal levels of activity.2
Unfortunately, 3% to 10% of people who have ACL surgery still have knee pain
and instability.3 Athletes and those who participate
in sports generally can return to their sport within months, depending on how
intense and sports-focused the rehabilitation was.
Not all ACL injuries require surgery, but whether you have surgery
or not, you need to start strengthening your knee and regaining motion soon
after you injure it. This prepares you for your rehabilitation program if you
choose not to have surgery and also helps prepare the knee for surgery if you
choose to have it.