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Posterior Cruciate Ligament (PCL)

see knee anatomy

The PCL avoids abnormal posterior translation between the tibia and femur. This prevents damage to the cartilage and meniscus

The PCL can get torn usually following sports or after Road traffic accidents etc.. This leads to instability and a sense of buckling.

Unfortunately no, PCL does not heal with medicines.

The torn PCL can be reconstructed by arthroscopy with hamstrings or bone patellar-tendon-bone graft (add scar image too) and the patient can start walking the next day itself.

1-3 days(patients prefer weekend surgery)

No. Besides white-collar job professionals return to work the same week– the patient can usually return to sports in 12 weeks

Two small stitches are only needed. Hence scars are small and cosmetically appealing. In males, the presence of hair, obscures the scar completely. For hamstrings graft harvesting, another separate incision of around an inch size is needed.

The patient can go back to work in 3-10 days itself once they are comfortable (deskjobs and IT professionals). In case of meniscal repairs, the patient can go back to work with some restrictions in day-to-day activities.

Patients usually start driving cars at around 6-8 weeks based on their comfort and also recovery.

Spinal anaesthesia or short general anaesthesia is sufficient usually.

Definetely yes. Surgery is only half the battle. Adequate exercising with preplanned protocols under the guidance of your surgeon and physiotherapist is mandatory and ensures good successful results. A brace maybe needed for some time to protect the reconstructed ligament

I meniscal repair has been performed, you may need crutches for some time.

The patient can usually return to sports in 12 weeks.