Originally Posted by
JRoberts
Hey everyone, I have an ongoing knee problem and I want to get everyone's input on what it might be and how I can fix it. I've been to a few physios and a sports physician, and had an MRI done, none of which have been able to identify/solve the problem. So I'm hoping someone here can do a bit better . . .
Here's the summary:
- I get a sharp pain in the back of my left knee when it's bent under load such as when squatting, lunging, walking stairs etc.
- The pain is right in the back center of the knee, not far from the surface.
- I can bend it through a full range of motion with no pain at all if there's no weight on it.
- It gets aggravated much more by fast bending movements under bodyweight than by slow movements (even under much heavier weight). For example, I can do multiple heavy barbell squat sets and be fine, but if I lunge quickly onto it (such as doing a fast dip when dancing, or even dipping quickly in a push press), that's what seems to aggravate it.
- When the problem comes up, if I take it easy for a few days, it goes away and I can go back to doing everything pain free.
- However, even when the pain is gone, the knee still doesn't feel very strong and usually I instinctively don't want to push it too hard.
- The MRI showed everything normal - no signs of meniscal tear, ligament damage or other cartilage problems, no cysts, no tendon problems etc.
- I've read about the popliteus muscle causing problems in this area, but I don't get any pain when I press into the back of the knee, so that doesn't sound like the root of the problem.
As far as I can see, the main things that could cause pain in this area are either a meniscus tear or a hamstring injury. It's been basically a year since I first felt the injury, so I would have thought it's not a hamstring problem?
I did jar the knee when I accidentally stepped into a pothole while running 3 weeks before the problem came up. Is it possible that I tore the meniscus then but the problem didn't manifest until afterward? I heard that MRIs are not always accurate in detecting meniscus tears, so I'm still wondering if that could be the problem.
Has anyone got any ideas on what it might be and what I can do to solve the problem?
Thanks in advance
Jay
- - - Updated - - -
Here's some more background:
In mid-December 2012, I was running along the beach in shallow water when my foot stepped into a pothole while the knee was fully extended. This jarred the knee and I had some pain (not in the same place as now) for a couple of days, but then it went away completely after that. This may or may not be relevant. I did lots of leg work in the weeks following this with no problems at all.
The first day I felt the problem I'm having now was in January 2013. In the morning, I did a jump rope warm-up (this is a strong point of mine and my style is very low jump height / low impact) and then a Tabata workout with kipping pull-ups, sit-ups, dumbell shoulder press and kettlebell swings. I didn't feel any problem whatsoever at that point, so I'm not sure if anything in that training session was the original cause.
A few hours later I felt the sharp pain in the back of the left knee when I was walking up stairs. By the evening, it was so bad that I couldn't even push the clutch in my car without getting massive pain.
For the next few days, the knee and calf/foot/toes swelled right up and the knee felt like jelly. I didn't even walk on it for about a week. After a few days, the swelling went down, but it still felt very weak. I went back to walking normally after a couple of weeks, but basically rested it (ie didn't put any weight on it when it was bent) for 2 whole months.
It slowly got better over the next few months and I got back into bodyweight squats and step-ups to strengthen the muscles again, but there was lots of clicking in the knee joint at different times - mostly on the lateral side.
Then, in the middle of the year, I'd been doing a lot of physical farming work overseas and the pain in the back of the knee came back again. Ever since then, it's come and gone - sometimes as a result of fast weight-bearing movements, but sometimes after I've done nothing demanding at all.
None of the specialists I've seen have had any ideas on what the problem might be or what I can do to solve it. The only thing the sports physician came up with was that the PCL looked a bit thin in the MRI. But since it was totally intact, there was nothing that could be done about it.
The only advice I got from the physios was "strengthen the quad", but I've done a lot of that and reached a point where I was back squatting more than I ever have before, yet this hasn't solved the problem by itself.