Chronic ACL deficiency

Provided by: Healthwise
Not yet rated

An anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury can involve a small or medium tear 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 may move abnormally on the upper bone, with a sense of the knee giving out.

An ACL injury may develop into chronic (long-lasting and recurrent) ACL deficiency: this is also called ACL insufficiency or an ACL-deficient knee. The ability of the ACL to control knee movement decreases, resulting in more sliding of the bones. The knee becomes more and more unstable—it begins to buckle or give out, sometimes with pain and swelling. This can result in further injury, loss of strength (weakness), and instability. This abnormal sliding also can damage cartilage and trap and damage the pads that cushion the knee joints (menisci) and can lead to premature osteoarthritis.

ACL surgery is often done for chronic ACL deficiency, unless the knee is so damaged that surgery won't help. When possible, starting a rehabilitation program before surgery can help speed rehabilitation after surgery.

If you have chronic ACL deficiency and you are willing and able to stop activities that require a lot of knee stability, rehabilitation may make your knee stable enough to perform daily activities, and you may not need surgery.

Credits

Author Robin Parks, MS
Author Ralph Poore
Editor Kathleen M. Ariss, MS
Associate Editor Michele Cronen
Associate Editor Tracy Landauer
Associate Editor Pat Truman
Primary Medical Reviewer William M. Green, MD
- Emergency Medicine
Primary Medical Reviewer Kathleen Romito, MD
- Family Medicine
Specialist Medical Reviewer Kathie Hummel-Berry, PT, PhD
- Physical Therapy
Specialist Medical Reviewer Patrick J. McMahon, MD
- Orthopedics
Last Updated May 19, 2006
Last Updated: 05/19/2006

© 1995-2007, Healthwise, Incorporated, P.O. Box 1989, Boise, ID 83701. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

This information is not intended to replace the advice of a doctor. Healthwise disclaims any liability for the decisions you make based on this information. For more information, click here. Privacy Policy. How this information was developed.

Was this article helpful?
Tell us what you think.

Be the first to rate!
liked it no thanks

In the Spotlight

Massage Therapy

Massage therapy can relieve muscle tension and may improve blood flow, relieve pressure on nerves, and restore normal joint movement.

Learn more »

Yahoo! Groups

Join the Conversation:

Join a Yahoo! Group and discuss topics with other members of the group.

All Diseases and Conditions Groups »

Yahoo! Health Videos

My Health

help

Tip of the Day

Provided by: RealAge

If foot pain is throwing a wrench in your daily plans, there’s a simple solution that could get you back to high-stepping. Read More »

View All Tips »

Tell us what you think about Yahoo! Health - Send us your feedback