A Snow and ski forum. SkiBanter

If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Go Back   Home » SkiBanter forum » Skiing Newsgroups » General
Site Map Home Register Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

Knee injury while *standing still* - well, almost.



 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old February 19th 04, 02:14 PM
FGreen
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Knee injury while *standing still* - well, almost.

(The earliest I can see an ortho is 1.5 months away, so I'm asking the
group.)

Everyone must be thinking I'm totally out of shape, but not really.
I'm in a reasonably good physical health. I haven't been exercising
solely for skiing, but the way I injured myself just gets me so mad
'cause I was literally standing still when it started happening.

I was standing facing uphill with ski tips together but tips apart.
(Don't ask me why I did that, I was busy trying to read the map and
telling my young son to put his gloves back on at the same time.)
Obviously, I started sliding backward, tips kept spreading apart, and
somehow I couldn't lift either ski. I was doing the 'split' till I
couldn't hold any longer and felt backward. Both knees came inside,
and felt a 'pop' on the inside of my right knee.

I felt the way how the classic beginner does who'd never been on skis.
Actually I must've looked worse.

Felt a pain on the inside of right knee, stayed down for a minute or
so. The pain went away and was able to gently ski down. No sign of
swelling or pain since the injury point and just tender and a bit
sore. Am able to put weight on the injured side, trying not to twist
at the knee. Took a couple of motrin since then, but I have to say
there is no pain, no swelling, a bit sore and tight. Very minor
instability if I can call it that.

The soreness is on the inside of the right knee and there is no
hyperextending.

Has anyone injured just the MCL? Does it feel different than ACL
injury? Do you think the MCL injury heals itself based on the
symptoms I have? Would it be ok to ski gently? (My son is taking
lessons and I need to accompany him on the chair 'cause he's too
young.)
Ads
  #2  
Old February 19th 04, 03:11 PM
Jon C
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Knee injury while *standing still* - well, almost.


"FGreen" wrote in message
om...
Has anyone injured just the MCL? Does it feel different than ACL
injury? Do you think the MCL injury heals itself based on the
symptoms I have? Would it be ok to ski gently? (My son is taking
lessons and I need to accompany him on the chair 'cause he's too
young.)


I sprained the hell out of my MCL two years ago skiing. Felt the pop, the
pain went away after 5 minutes, but by the time I got home that night it
hurt pretty bad. The next morning I could hardly move it, and any lateral
force caused excrutiating pain.

After a few days I could more or less walk OK. Stairs were a problem, and
the knee was fairly unstable for months. Thankfully it was towards the end
of the ski season and I called it that. Two years later, the knee is back
to normal, but the pain lingered for quite a long while. I play hockey and
go caving... took me a while to get back full mobility and I wore a brace
for about 6 months.

It sounds like yours isn't as bad as mine was, but I'd wait until I could
withstand significant lateral pressure and there was no instability before I
got back into it. Course I can't imagine accompanying the son on lessons
would do much as long as you're careful.

Talk to a doc about it.

Jon


  #3  
Old February 19th 04, 03:20 PM
Richard Henry
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Knee injury while *standing still* - well, almost.


"FGreen" wrote in message
om...

I was standing facing uphill with ski tips together but tips apart.
(Don't ask me why I did that, I was busy trying to read the map and
telling my young son to put his gloves back on at the same time.)
Obviously, I started sliding backward, tips kept spreading apart, and
somehow I couldn't lift either ski. I was doing the 'split' till I
couldn't hold any longer and felt backward. Both knees came inside,
and felt a 'pop' on the inside of my right knee.


Sometimes the best technique is to give up and fall down.


  #4  
Old February 19th 04, 04:17 PM
Walt
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Knee injury while *standing still* - well, almost.

Richard Henry wrote:
"FGreen" wrote

I was standing facing uphill with ski tips together but tips apart.
(Don't ask me why I did that, I was busy trying to read the map and
telling my young son to put his gloves back on at the same time.)
Obviously, I started sliding backward, tips kept spreading apart, and
somehow I couldn't lift either ski. I was doing the 'split' till I
couldn't hold any longer and felt backward. Both knees came inside,
and felt a 'pop' on the inside of my right knee.


Sometimes the best technique is to give up and fall down.


True enough. I prefer to set it down on my terms rather than flailing
for balance and going down in a way that's not my choosing. According to
Vermont Ski Safety, trying to recover from an off-balance position is
one of the best ways to tear an ACL. Every skier should be aware of
this:
http://www.vermontskisafety.com/faq_...iers_tips.html

The method of falling that FGreen describes (I think he meant to say
tips together, tails apart, facing uphill) is damn hard to get out of
once it starts. It's caught me a couple of times.

Anyway, if I was in FGreen's position, I'd find a qualified medical
professional to look at it sooner rather than later.


--
//-Walt
//
// http://tinyurl.com/3gg3e
  #5  
Old February 19th 04, 05:44 PM
bdubya
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Knee injury while *standing still* - well, almost.

On 19 Feb 2004 07:14:42 -0800, (FGreen) wrote:

(The earliest I can see an ortho is 1.5 months away, so I'm asking the
group.)

Everyone must be thinking I'm totally out of shape, but not really.
I'm in a reasonably good physical health. I haven't been exercising
solely for skiing, but the way I injured myself just gets me so mad
'cause I was literally standing still when it started happening.

I was standing facing uphill with ski tips together but tips apart.
(Don't ask me why I did that, I was busy trying to read the map and
telling my young son to put his gloves back on at the same time.)
Obviously, I started sliding backward, tips kept spreading apart, and
somehow I couldn't lift either ski. I was doing the 'split' till I
couldn't hold any longer and felt backward. Both knees came inside,
and felt a 'pop' on the inside of my right knee.

I felt the way how the classic beginner does who'd never been on skis.
Actually I must've looked worse.

Felt a pain on the inside of right knee, stayed down for a minute or
so. The pain went away and was able to gently ski down. No sign of
swelling or pain since the injury point and just tender and a bit
sore. Am able to put weight on the injured side, trying not to twist
at the knee. Took a couple of motrin since then, but I have to say
there is no pain, no swelling, a bit sore and tight. Very minor
instability if I can call it that.

The soreness is on the inside of the right knee and there is no
hyperextending.

Has anyone injured just the MCL? Does it feel different than ACL
injury? Do you think the MCL injury heals itself based on the
symptoms I have? Would it be ok to ski gently? (My son is taking
lessons and I need to accompany him on the chair 'cause he's too
young.)


Yikes. The knee is complex, I'm no MD, and this is usenet, so don't
take this to the bank, but you may well have blown your ACL. The fall
you describe, backwards, with a twist to the knee, loading the tails
of the skis (which then try to snap back) sounds like the classic
ACL-popper. The symptoms you describe sound a whole lot like when I
blew mine (totally severed it playing ultimate), especially the "pop",
the serious-but-not-lasting pain, and the substantial functionality
afterwards.

I was in denial about mine for about three months afterwards. I was
able to walk just fine, and do a lot of windsurfing, but couldn't do
anything involving impact, like running or jumping, or stress on a
deeply flexed knee (like ducking under the boom while tacking a small
sailboat). BUT, this three-month period is probably when I picked up
the multiple cartilage tears that were found along with the blown ACL.
So based on my experience, I'd say you can _probably_ ski gently, as
the hamstring muscle will take over a lot of the work the ACL was
doing, but be aware that you are taking a chance on further injury by
doing so. My non-professional advice would be to give it a try, but
take it easy, stay out of the bumps and the terrain park, don't ski
all day long (muscles get fatigued at the end of the day), LAY OFF if
the soreness gets worse (or if you have any sudden, sharp pains) and
get checked ASAP. IMHO, YMMV, etc.

bw
  #6  
Old February 20th 04, 05:44 PM
FGreen
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Knee injury while *standing still* - well, almost.

Sometimes the best technique is to give up and fall down.

True enough. I prefer to set it down on my terms rather than flailing
for balance and going down in a way that's not my choosing. According to
Vermont Ski Safety, trying to recover from an off-balance position is
one of the best ways to tear an ACL. Every skier should be aware of
this:
http://www.vermontskisafety.com/faq_...iers_tips.html

The method of falling that FGreen describes (I think he meant to say
tips together, tails apart, facing uphill) is damn hard to get out of
once it starts. It's caught me a couple of times.

Anyway, if I was in FGreen's position, I'd find a qualified medical
professional to look at it sooner rather than later.


I know, I know... I normally fall, but it was one of those cases where
you are in denial because you were barely moving. I was thinking,
'What the heck?', followed by 'I can recover this', by 'Oh, sh*t'.
Actually, I don't even know if there was a way to fall safely because
my legs were fairly apart already. Couldn't fall sideways, couldn't
fall forward, so the only way was to fall backward which messed up the
knee.

And, yes, I meant to say tips together, tails apart, facing uphill.

Anyhow, I saw my primary doc, who agreed that I should see an ortho,
and I'm seeing my ortho next week. Thanks for comments and
suggestions.
  #8  
Old March 4th 04, 12:57 PM
FGreen
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Knee injury while *standing still* - well, almost.

Chuck wrote in message . 4...

I know it's a bit late for this, but why were you facing uphill with tips
together? Next time put tails together if facing uphill. Better yet, just
carry a trail map in your pocket so you don't have to stop to read the
sign.

Maybe digging in the poles behind you would have helped?

I hope your injury is not severe and that you can be back to skiing soon.


Why? Simple, stupidity.

Yes, I normally keep my tails together when facing uphill as you said,
but I was coming off the bench after several years, and I
overestimated my manuverability. I was keeping one eye on my son who
was standing just a bit uphill from me, and the other on the trailmap
in my hand. My skis started off more or less parallel in almost flat,
was barely moving, and didn't realize there was a bit of slope just
behind me. When my skis started moving backward, I figured I could
easily put them together, but... you know the rest of the story.
 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 09:15 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 SkiBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.