The Foot Detective

Case 023: The Unravelling — Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury

4 min · 8. maj 2026
episode Case 023: The Unravelling — Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury cover

Description

This one starts with a moment the runner remembers clearly: a planted foot, a descent, a pop, and a knee that suddenly no longer feels like it belongs to them. The X-ray was normal. The swelling settled. But three months later, the knee still gives way on uneven ground. In this episode of The Foot Detective, we open the file on the Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury — the ligament injury too often dismissed as a simple sprain when the early clues are missed. We follow the evidence through rapid swelling, non-contact twisting mechanisms, instability on descents, and the clinical tests that reveal what an X-ray never can. This is not just a dramatic knee episode. It is a structural failure with long-term consequences if it is underdiagnosed, poorly staged, or rushed back too soon. We look at when MRI matters, when surgery becomes part of the conversation, and why ACL rehab is not a quick return — but a nine-to-twelve-month rebuild. Because a knee that gives way is not asking for reassurance. It is asking to be properly understood. If you want to unlock the problem, the knee is key.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the The Foot Detective community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

33 episodes

episode Case 027: The Inside Job Medial Collateral Ligament Injury artwork

Case 027: The Inside Job Medial Collateral Ligament Injury

Case 027: The Inside Job — Medial Collateral Ligament Injury A valgus force on a planted knee. Three days of strapping and a transatlantic flight later, he wants to run a half marathon by the weekend. Sole Trace has seen this before — and knows that the real danger isn't the injury itself, it's the grading. A misclassified MCL sprain returns to sport too early, loads an unstable knee, and ends up worse than if it had never been assessed at all. In this case, Sole Trace lines up the suspects — from contact mechanics and chronic valgus collapse to missed meniscal co-injury and the calcium deposit nobody thought to X-ray — and works through the clinical framework that separates a fortnight off from a surgical referral. The MCL usually heals. The question is whether you know what grade you're dealing with before you make that call.

Yesterday6 min