We present the case of a collegiate football player with an extensive bilateral ligamentous knee injury history to elucidate the mechanisms and possible explanations behind why some athletes sustain recurrent injuries. We hope to initiate thought on altering rehabilitation schedules for athletes who are at an increased risk of re-injury. A 21-year-old collegiate American football player presented with a re-tear of his left anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) and medial meniscus following reconstructive surgery. The initial injury occurred to the patient when he was 15 and suffered a right ACL, lateral collateral ligament, and lateral meniscus tear in a non-contact injury. At the age of 19, he suffered his second injury, a contact-associated left ACL tear. Upon return to play six months following the left ACL tear, the patient sustained a non-contact bucket handle tear of the right medial meniscus. One year later, he presented with a re-tear of his left ACL. His initial left and right ACLs were repaired with hamstring autografts, and his current left ACL was repaired with a bone-patellar tendon-bone graft. This case illustrates an all too common situation plaguing the modern orthopedic sports medicine surgeon. At what point should a surgeon diverge from the standard rehabilitation schedule of ACL surgery due to a patient being at too high of a risk for a re-tear? We propose further investigations into risk factors as well as rehabilitation protocols to help surgeons identify and optimize treatment for these patients.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9188759PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.24965DOI Listing

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