The hardest days. Managing pain, protecting your graft, early mobility goals, and surviving the initial shock of surgery.
The first two weeks post-ACL reconstruction are characterized by:
⚠️ This is supposed to be hard. You just had major reconstructive surgery. What you're feeling is normal. It will get better.
These are general targets. Your surgeon's protocol takes priority.
Multimodal approach: Combining different pain relief methods is most effective.
Typical medications (prescribed by your doctor):
⚠️ Pain medication safety: Take exactly as prescribed. Never mix with alcohol. Be aware of constipation (common with opioids—use stool softeners). Taper off opioids as soon as pain allows, typically within 1 week.
If pain is not improving by day 7 or worsens significantly, contact your surgeon.
You'll have 2-4 small incisions (arthroscopic portals) plus graft harvest site:
⚠️ Infection after ACL surgery is rare (less than 1%) but serious. When in doubt, call your surgeon.
These exercises are typically started immediately or within days of surgery. Frequency: 3-5 times daily unless otherwise instructed.
1. Quad Sets (Quadriceps Isometrics)
2. Ankle Pumps
5. Heel Slides (Knee Flexion)
Protocol varies significantly by surgeon and graft:
⚠️ Follow YOUR surgeon's weight-bearing instructions exactly. This is not an area to push faster.
The first two weeks are emotionally challenging. Common feelings include:
These feelings are normal and expected. You are not weak. You are not alone. 42% of ACL patients develop depression—it's a recognized medical issue, not a character flaw.
Contact a mental health professional if you experience:
Resources: Mental health screening tools and resources → | Understanding ACL recovery and mental health →
🚨 Crisis support: Call or text 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline) or call 911
Call 911 or go to ER immediately: