Exercise Overview

Straight leg raises are one of the most important early exercises after ACL surgery. They strengthen the quadriceps, hip flexors, and hip stabilizers without stressing the knee joint. SLRs are performed in four directions to target all the muscles around the hip.

Why SLRs Are Essential

  • Strengthen quads without bending the knee
  • Build hip strength needed for walking and stairs
  • Prevent muscle atrophy during early recovery
  • Safe to start in the first week post-op
  • Foundation for all future strengthening

Eliminating Quad Lag

A key early milestone is performing SLRs without quad lag—meaning your knee stays completely straight throughout the lift. If your knee bends during the lift, focus on quad sets until you can maintain full extension. Using a knee brace locked at 0° can help initially.

The Four Directions

Perform SLRs in all four directions to strengthen the entire hip complex:

1. Flexion (Forward)

Position

Lying on your back

Target Muscles

Quadriceps, hip flexors (iliopsoas, rectus femoris)

Instructions

  1. Lie on your back, uninvolved leg bent
  2. Lock your surgical knee straight (quad set)
  3. Lift your leg 12-18 inches
  4. Hold 2-3 seconds, slowly lower

2. Abduction (Side)

Position

Lying on your uninvolved side

Target Muscles

Gluteus medius, gluteus minimus, TFL

Instructions

  1. Lie on your good side, body straight
  2. Keep surgical leg straight and slightly back
  3. Lift leg toward ceiling 12-18 inches
  4. Hold 2-3 seconds, slowly lower

3. Extension (Backward)

Position

Lying on your stomach (prone)

Target Muscles

Gluteus maximus, hamstrings

Instructions

  1. Lie face down on a firm surface
  2. Keep surgical knee straight
  3. Lift your leg 6-12 inches off surface
  4. Hold 2-3 seconds, slowly lower

Note: Range is smaller than other directions

4. Adduction (Cross)

Position

Lying on your surgical side

Target Muscles

Adductors (inner thigh muscles)

Instructions

  1. Lie on your surgical side
  2. Cross your uninvolved leg over
  3. Lift your bottom (surgical) leg up
  4. Hold 2-3 seconds, slowly lower

Detailed Instructions: Forward SLR

1

Starting Position

Lie on your back on a firm, flat surface. Bend your uninvolved leg with foot flat on the floor. Keep your surgical leg straight with toes pointing up.

2

Engage Your Quad

Perform a quad set first—tighten your thigh muscle and press your knee down. This locks your knee straight and is critical for proper form.

3

Lift Your Leg

While maintaining the quad contraction, lift your entire leg 12-18 inches off the surface (match the height of your bent knee). Keep the knee locked straight—no bending!

4

Hold at the Top

Hold for 2-3 seconds at the top. You should feel your quad and hip flexor working. Breathe normally—don't hold your breath.

5

Lower Slowly

Lower your leg slowly back to the starting position (3-4 seconds down). Rest briefly and repeat.

Common Mistakes

Quad Lag (Knee Bending)

If your knee bends during the lift, you're not ready for full SLRs. Use a brace locked at 0° or continue with quad sets until you can maintain extension.

Lifting Too High

Going higher than 18 inches doesn't provide more benefit and may cause hip flexor cramping. Match the height of your opposite bent knee.

Rotating the Leg

Keep your toes pointing straight up (or slightly out). Excessive rotation changes which muscles are working.

Holding Your Breath

Breathe normally throughout the exercise. Holding your breath increases blood pressure unnecessarily.

Dropping the Leg

Control the lowering phase—don't let your leg drop. The eccentric (lowering) portion is just as important for building strength.

Arching Your Back

Keep your lower back in a neutral position. If you're arching excessively, you may be lifting too high or have weak core muscles.

Sets, Reps & Frequency

Phase Sets Reps Hold Frequency
Week 1-2 2-3 10 2-3 sec 3x daily
Week 2-4 3 15 3 sec 2-3x daily
Week 4-6 3 15-20 3 sec 2x daily
Week 6+ 3 15-20 3 sec Daily or as warm-up

Perform all four directions. If one direction is significantly weaker, add an extra set for that direction.

Progressions

Level 1: With Brace

Wear your brace locked at 0° if you have quad lag. This ensures proper form while you build strength.

Level 2: Without Brace

Once you can maintain full knee extension, perform without the brace.

Level 3: Add Ankle Weight

Start with 1-2 lbs, progress to 5+ lbs over time. Add weight when you can easily do 3x20.

Level 4: Slower Tempo

Increase time under tension: 3 seconds up, 5 seconds down.

Level 5: Standing Variations

Progress to standing hip flexion, abduction, and extension with resistance bands.

Pro Tips

Pair with Quad Sets

Always start your SLR session with a few quad sets to "wake up" the muscle and practice the contraction you'll need.

Quality Over Quantity

Ten perfect reps are better than twenty sloppy ones. If your form breaks down, rest and restart.

Track Your Progress

Note when you can do SLRs without the brace, when you add weight, and how many reps you can do without fatigue.

Don't Skip Adduction

The adduction (cross) SLR is often neglected but important for medial knee stability and overall hip balance.