How do I know if my knee injury is serious?
Written in association with:
Orthopaedic surgeon
Published: 06/03/2023
Edited by: Carlota Pano
As the largest joint in our body, the knee is vulnerable to many different types of injuries caused by physical stress, trauma or forceful movement.
Here, Mr Atif Malik, highly skilled consultant trauma and orthopaedic surgeon, provides an expert insight into knee injuries, including causes, symptoms and management.
What is the most common knee injury in sports?
The most common knee injuries that I see in my practice are knee sprains, which I see very often in the weekend warrior as well as in the elite athlete.
These can range from very minor sprains, which resolve within a week or two with appropriate advice, exercise and physiotherapy, to much more serious sprains with ligament or cartilage injury, and very occasionally, bone injury as well.
What causes knee injuries in athletes?
What I see the most in my practice are people that do not prepare for the activity that they are about to complete. By this, I mean warming up and warming down insufficiently, which can cause muscle injuries, as well as ligament and soft tissue sprains.
Often, just treating knee injuries with physiotherapy, rest, ice, compression stockings or elevation, can make a world of difference.
How do I know if my knee injury is serious?
Several factors indicate a more serious knee injury, including:
the non-resolution of symptoms the inability to put on weight on the knee the inability to move the knee symptoms of clicking or locking a feeling of instability a feeling of the knee giving way
These are all symptoms that should prompt people to seek specialist advice.
Can knee injuries heal on their own?
Very minor knee sprains often do not require any treatment besides a RICE (rest, ice, compression stocking and elevation) regimen and anti-inflammatory medication.
Other injuries, however, such as those with symptoms of clicking or locking and the feeling of the knee giving way in addition to the inability to put on weight on the knee and the inability to move the knee, are more worrying and do indicate a more serious knee injury.
What is the best exercise for knee pain?
This depends on the type of knee injury that a patient is reporting, because different knee injuries respond better to different types of exercises.
For example, anterior knee pain, which may be apparent when going up and down the stairs or up and down inclines, often comes from injuries to the under service of the kneecap. This type of knee pain requires a specific exercise and rehabilitation protocol.
An ACL injury, on the other hand, causes symptoms of instability. Thus, the set of exercises and the rehabilitation programme for this injury will be completely different.
I think the important thing is to try and treat the patient as an individual, and to try and tailor the rehabilitation program according to their particular injury and their particular functional level.
Mr Atif Alik is a skilled consultant trauma and orthopaedic surgeon with more than 20 years of experience.
If you require expert treatment and management for a knee injury, do not hesitate to book an appointment with Mr Malik via his Top Doctors profile today.