Well after reading about Altagirl, Snowtigress, altachic, vinman, buzzworthy and the strong minded Dr Mark i am sorry to report that i did a stellar job blowing out my acl last saturday 2/2/08 in Montana. I was skiing a steep ridge area, did 6 or 7 high speed turns in steep fresh snow, criss crossing a small 10-15 foot dome feature with fall away on either side. I went for a big right turn and turned back into the feature. My shovel caught some small wind blown crud (this was the downwind side of overnight and dominant winds). I compressed hard, and felt my ski turning uphill. Next I remember launch and a pop, then blackness as i slid to a stop 20 feet beyond my release.
There was a moment of panic as the pain hit hard and recognition of the feeling "pop" I had heard discussed so many times in this thread. I caught my breathe tried to keep myself from panicking, and even went back up to my ski. I put my head down, got my ski back on and tried on turn in the pow and the knee felt like it might give out. I ended up side stepping the run, skiing the flat out run and riding a groomer to the bottom.
So there you have it. It was an accident. I may have been going to fast, but wtf. I have been skiing for 25 years, i am 34 and nothing like this has ever happened. It followed perhaps my best day of skiing ever? Is there reason or did the statistics of skiing aggressively and in off piste snow finally get to me? I have little or no history of knee problems.I am a touch overweight, but i workout 3-5 a week, take glucosomine etc, have worked hard to stay strong and ready for my vacations.
The good news is the MRI shows a complete tear, with no other damage, minor mcl strain (?). My local young(39) agressive doctor prefers hamstring repairs. There is no doubt he is competent and credible, but he is not Dr Andrews, Dr Stone, Dr Mark etc, has not done 1000s of these.
I recently finished a L shoulder Open Bankart Repair by Dr Andrews 9-6-06, it was a second or a "revision" following scoping, and i felt I needed to get the best possible surgeon. The trip to Birmingham was a bit of a hassle, but worth it now. Dr Andrews insists on early movement. I did rehab as soon as i woke up, so did the acl repairs done the same day as me. So I am used to aggressive, and frankly i think movement promotes healing, so i am concerned that the hamstring graft actually forces an extended immobilization to let it heal? I intend to immerse myself in the reading and the advice of others.
Anyway I would really appreciate comments, i know we are beating this graft thing to a pulp, messing with my beautiful hamstrings has me worried. I have huge quads and strong hammies. I am worried that by messing with the hamstrings you actually add time to the immobility time, as you have to let this sit for 3-4 weeks.
My instinct tells me I am fine with my doctor and procedure, but all this sitting around and reading makes me nervous, please let me know what you think....
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