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DO YOU REALLY NEED ACL SURGERY?
A COMPLETE TEAR, YES, A PARTIAL TEAR, NO
First Determine Whether It Is A Complete Tear.
Ross Hauser, M.D.
READ COMPLETE ARTICLE
"The MRI says I have a complete tear, I guess I need surgery"
Maybe not. "MRI studies have not been shown to be accurate in the
differentiation of complete and partial ACL tears." This is from "the bible" of
MRIs and sports medicine.(1) If athletes would just hold off on surgery until
evaluated and treated with Prolotherapy, there would be a lot less of them
needing pain pills, knee replacement surgery, and wheelchairs and canes later in
life.
Rest or Surgery, Some Poor Options
In the surgical mode of options, the best case scenario for a torn ACL is that
athletes are told that a tendon can replace the ligament and the rehabilitation
of this new structure takes a full year. Perhaps then, the athlete will be able
to compete again at a later date. The other option of course in this mode of
options is do nothing, rest the injury to see if the ACL responds.
Left untreated ACL injuries have terrible consequences and, if treated with
surgery there are bad consequences. Unfortunately for the athlete unaware of
Prolotherapy, they must choose between the lesser of two evils.
The Untreated ACL
Studies have shown:
a. up to 86% of these knees "gave way" within four years.
b. only 14% of athletes were able to return to unlimited athletic activities.
c. after ten years, up to 78 percent of the knees treated without surgery showed
osteoarthritis.
d. ACL deficient knees are plagued by long term swelling and stiffness.
Realize that the conservative treatments the athletes received in the above
studies were Rest, Ice, Compression, and Elevation (RICE treatment), anti-inflammatories,
cortisone shots, physical therapy, and other conservative therapies. They did
not receive Prolotherapy.
What about ACL Surgery?
There are various surgical techniques employed in the ACL reconstruction: repair
through the patellar defect, arthroscopically-assisted techniques, and the mini-arthrotomy
technique. The problem is that the orthopedic surgeons' views on excellent
results is different than the athletes' views. The athlete is thinking "I'm
going to be back to my sport as good as new as soon as the surgery is over." The
orthopedist is thinking, "This athlete doesn't have a chance to be back on that
ball field, but the surgery will help stabilize the knee." Poor communication is
at the crux of this. The final goals and desired outcomes are never discussed.
Prolotherapy and ACL Tears. What is Realistic?
In a partial tear, Prolotherapy can be done exactly where the ACL attaches onto
the tibia and femur, thereby stimulating the ligament on both ends to
proliferate and strengthen.
Prolotherapy can cure a partial ACL tear, but not a complete tear.
A complete tear requires surgery. Prolotherapy is still helpful in this
situation, because the other ligaments around the knee, as well as the joint
capsule itself, were at least stretched during the forceful event to the knee
that totally disrupted the ACL. Strengthening the surrounding connective tissue
will help disperse the load on the rebuilt ACL.
1. Stoller, D. Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine.
Second Edition. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott-Raven, 1997, 330.
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