The common cold of sports injuries-torn ACL

August 6, 2014 by shahzaib15780

One of the most common sports related injuries is a torn ACL (Anterior Cruciate Ligament). Many people think that ACL injuries happen mostly in contact sports but the truth is that a majority of ACL injuries occur without contact. One example of a non-contact ACL injury was during a recent major league baseball game. Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Paul Maholm ran to cover first base on a relatively routine ground ball. Maholm arrived at first, planted the toes of his right foot on the edge of the bag and then went down riving in pain and reaching for his right knee. After watching the replay about a dozen times it is still hard to say that anything even truly happened. However, within a day it was confirmed that Maholm had a complete ACL tear. A simple misstep and his whole season is over.

The ACL is one of four major ligaments that help to align and stabilize the knee. The knee is the point at which thighbone (femur), shinbone (tibia), and kneecap (patella) meet. The ACL attaches the center of the kneecap to the front of the shinbone. The function of the ACL is to assure proper alignment of the shinbone and thighbone. In addition, the ACL provides very important rotational stability. Like many other ligament injuries, ACL injuries can be diagnosed by severity. Grade 1 ACL sprains are considered mild and involve the ACL being stretched but not detached. With grade 1 ACL sprains, the ACL is still capable of stabilizing the knee joint. Grade 2 ACL sprains are moderate or partial tears and occurs when the ACL is stretched to the point of becoming loose. Grade 3 ACL sprains are the most severe of the ACL injuries. Grade 3 ACL sprains occur when the ACL is completely torn into two separate pieces making the knee joint very unstable.

Grade 1 and some grade 2 ACL sprains can often be treated without surgery as long as instability symptoms are at a minimum. The process of healing involves a heavy regimen of progressive physical therapy but can often restore the ACL close to its pre-injury form. For a more severe tear or what is called a ‘complete tear’, surgical reconstruction is the only way to achieve pre-injury form if there are symptoms of instability. Instability is when the knee gives away or buckles. The ACL is replaced using a tendon graft typically from the patient’s patellar tendon, hamstring tendon, quadriceps tendon, or from various cadaver tendons. The success rate of ACL replacement is tremendous and many athletes come back after surgery and rehabilitation to perform similar to their pre-injury performance. One such example of this was Minnesota Vikings running back Adrian Peterson. Peterson nearly broke the NFL rushing record just one year after suffering a complete tear of his ACL and MCL.

As for the case of Paul Maholm, his surgery has not yet been scheduled, but should be scheduled soon. Given the recent success of professional athletes on surgically replaced ACLs, I have no doubt that we will see Paul Maholm on the mound for the start of the 2015 season.


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