ACL Tears: Perspective From a Surgeon Who's Been There

FEB 6, 202636 MIN
The Doctor Jiu Jitsu Show

ACL Tears: Perspective From a Surgeon Who's Been There

FEB 6, 202636 MIN

Description

In this episode of Doctor Jiu Jitsu, we tackle some of the most common concerns in combat sports: real-world injury management, practical orthopedic care, and how to actually use physical therapy to stay on the mats long term.Most combat athletes hear “ACL tear” and assume their season or career is over. It’s not. As an orthopedic sports surgeon for the U.S. Army, jiu-jitsu brown belt, and someone who has torn an ACL on the mats, I break down ACL injuries the way athletes actually need to hear them.We dive into how ACL tears really happen in combat sports, when surgery is truly necessary, what your graft options mean, and what rehab feels like from the inside. We also touch on other common issues like persistent shoulder injury, and how smart injury management and physical therapy can keep you performing instead of sidelined.My goal is simple: help you stay healthy, avoid re-injury, and get back to training with confidence.If you’ve torn your ACL, think you might have, or just want to protect your knees and shoulders while you keep training hard, this episode gives you the playbook I wish every combat athlete had.Episode Highlights:00:44 - What Dr. Jiu-Jitsu is and why ACL injuries matter02:20 - How ACL tears actually happen in combat sports03:47 - High-risk positions: takedowns, leg locks, lockdown, 50/5006:51 - How ACL tears present differently in combat athletes10:33 - How surgeons diagnose ACL tears: Lachman, drawer, pivot shift11:50 - Surgery vs no surgery: what athletes need to know18:08 - Graft options, repairs, and what’s best for combat sports23:01 - Rehab, return-to-sport timeline, and long-term knee healthNew episodes drop the first Friday of every month at doctorjiujitsu.com/podcast.If this episode hit home, share it with your training partners, drop a five-star review, and be sure to follow so you don’t miss the next one. Oss!To learn more about Dr. Megan Jimenez, check out her website: doctorjiujitsu.com