Thursday, April 12, 2007


My theory about my knee
To save some time I first need to explain a little bit about the anatomy of the knee. My theory is mainly about the ACL and the hamstrings. It is important to realize that these two structure have a close and very important relationship. The ACL serves the purpose of keeping your tibia in place. More specifically it limits anterior (forward) movement of the tibia in relation to the femur.
You have three muscles in your hammies, the biceps femoris(red), the semimembranosus(orange), and the semitendinosus(purple). They all originate on the ischial tuberosity (fanny bone). However, all three insert (distal attachment) at a different spot. The biceps femoris attaches on the head of the fibula, the semimebranosus attaches to the back side of the medial epicondyle (back inside of your knee), the semitendinosus wraps around the front of your knee and attaches on the anterior (front) medial (inside) aspect of your tibia. These origins and insertions are critical to knowing and understanding the different movements caused by the muscles. All three muscle cause flexion of the knee. However, our knee can also rotate internally and externally. Bend your knee to 90 degrees and turn your toes inward (internal rotation) and then outward (external rotation). The biceps femoris is primarily responsible for external rotation. The semimembranosus and semitendinosus are responsible for internal rotation. I know there is a good chance that some might have any idea what I am talking about, Dad, but it is important to understand the mechanics of the knee to understand my theory.
One more important role of the hammies. Because the biceps femoris and semitendinosus wrap around the knee, they play an important role in preventing anterior gliding of the tibia on the femur. Also, the ACL is must susceptible to tear when the knee is in a rotated position. For instance if I am cutting to the basket and plant my leg in a position that is forcing external rotation, then my semitendinosus will contract to hold my knee in place and keep the bones from moving to much in the wrong direction.
Next important thing for you to understand in order understand my theory. When I tore my ACL for the first time Dr. M decided to use a hamstring graph. This requires a cool instrument that runs along the tendon of the semitendonosus and shaves off a chunk large enough to serve as your ACL. The doctors then drill some holes and screw this graph into place. The semitendonosus tendon is left to hypertrophy and grow back to normal size. I did not know this until recently. I had also thought that they had just taken the entire tendon and had somehow tied my semitendonosus into my semimembranosus.
I specifically remember a moment during my first recovery when I thought for a short time I had retorn my ACL. It was my freshman year and all of my friends and roomates were playing snow football. I had decided to sit and watch (I was still in my brace). As I was getting up to leaving I felt a pull and what I thought was a snap in the back of my leg. I think I probably hyperextended it slightly. I thought I had retorn my ACL, I went and laid in my bed terrofied at what I had just done. I woke in the morning my knee felt okay, I had a check up in a week and my ACL was still there when the doctor checked. So I just forgot about it. You all know the rest of the story, I have continued to hurt and retear my ACL and other knee structures over and over again.
My theory is this: that day when I thought I had torn my ACL I acually tore the tendon of my semitendinosus. This makes sense, mainly because it is easy to feel that my right knee has a tendon where the semitendonosus should be when my left knee does not. The semitendonosus causes internal rotation and will help control excessive external rotation. the third time I tore my ACL occured when I was driving the lane and jumped of my left leg to the right. this action must of caused excessive external rotation and the semitendonousus is meant to restrict that. However, I did not have a semitendonosus and therefore my knee twisted to much and my ACL popped. I remember feeling that external twisting of my knee as I felt the ligament tear. I haven't run this theory by Dr. Noonan yet but I plan on doing so and seeing what he thinks. If I am incorrect I am curious to know why I am missing that tendon.
What does this mean? absolutely nothing. Except that now I think that I know what is wrong and that gives me some peace of mind. Thank you for reading this.

6 comments:

Goose said...

I'll tell you what is wrong... you got one super jacked leg dude!

Drew

P.S. Maybe you got something wrong with your poplitius. I know mine is jacked.

Mark said...

Adam--

I am most impressed, Ad. Seriously, you show a very thorough grasp of the biomechanics at work in your knee, as well as a lot of enthusiasm for it. You obviously have a very personal interest in this, and it's driven you to a sound understanding.

I am foreseeing you as an orthopedic surgeon or sports medicine doctor. You'd be a good one.

Mark

Tyler said...

I agree with the goose...so jacked!

It sounds like you have really thought about this whole thing and carefully applied your acquired knowledge to figuring out what went wrong. You have convinced me that you are exactly right. Well done.

Dad said...

Addie,
I will admit it even if the rest of these bozos won't. I have no idea what you are talking about. What language are you writing in?

It would seem to me that sometime during one of these many traumas and operations you have had, that what you theorize might very well have happened. I'm a tad baffled why Dr. Noonan would not have picked up on it while he was in their jacking with everything else.

Conclusion: You are probably very close to being right and bottom line is your knee is jacked up royally. However, if your theory is correct, it would be great if Dr. N could do something about it on this next operation. It all comes down to what he could actually do on this upcoming operation? Where would he get a new tendon? Could he do it at the same time as taking the plate out or would you need a 6th surgury? What would be the recovery on such an operation? What is the Add Bad boy's maximum lifetime coverage on our insurance....you gotta be getting near the limit? Etc. etc.

Good work Adam...you sold me Bud.

dad

Danalin said...

"All these things shall give thee experience and shall be for thy good"

I think that you going through ALL of these surgeries is helping to guide you down a path to becoming a mega rich orthopedic surgeon who develops some new type of surgery/procedure to help poor sould like yourself. Then you will look back on these times of frustration and misery with gratitude because now you are mega rich and well respected. :)

Wendi said...

Ad-bad: Bum knees are just that -- a bummer. There's just so much potential for something to go terribly awry with a limb with such intricate muscular connections. My own knees give me grief too (albeit not nearly as bad as your own jacked knee). When I walk up stairs I can hear them creaking rather loudly, a disgusting sound something akin to tearing a wing from a burnt chicken. BLEH, did I actually write that? :-S

Anyway, I found your discussion re: the musculature of the knee and hammies to be enlightening and informative. Sheesh, from personal experience alone you're certain to become a crackerjack orthopedic surgeon someday. Maybe there's even some kind of honorary degree in it somewhere, huh?

As a friend of mine once said:
"Bad leg. We're going to have to cut that off." ;-)