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ehab & Performance Lab podcast cover featuring Lynn Snyder-Mackler and Phil Plisky discussing open kinetic chain exercises after ACL reconstruction

Why Open Kinetic Chain Exercises Are Not Just Safe, But Essential After ACL Reconstruction

acl open kinetic chain

Not only are open kinetic chain exercises after ACL reconstruction safe, they're essential for the proper development of that graft tissue. That's one of the things we talked about in the Rehab & Performance Lab podcast with Dr. Lynn Snyder-Mackler on the open kinetic chain debate is changing our perspective from, "Is it safe?" We talk about tons of research that says it is safe. But more importantly, we should be loading this tissue, we should be stressing this tissue, and just like any other injury, the ACL graft is the same thing. It needs to change into being functioning like an ACL. So it needs to look like ACL tissue, thus it has to be strained like ACL tissue. Not only are we going to be looking at its safety, incorporating open kinetic chain exercises, it's actually essential. 

Rethinking Anterior Knee Pain After ACL Reconstruction

Should we be approaching anterior knee pain after ACL reconstruction differently? And I think the answer is yes. We discussed this with Dr. Lynn Snyder-Mackler in this episode. And I think the first thing we have to do is identify where that anterior knee pain is coming from. If it's coming from the patellar tendon, we probably should treat this more like a tendinopathy. And we need to be thinking about loading the tissue and if that tissue loading may be painful, but we need to think about that in an isolated perspective, not doing it in a closed chain where we're gonna get compensations because of that pain, but doing it in the open chain where we're gonna get the stress and the tissue remodeling we need without the compensations of doing it during a movement. Find out tips like this and more in this episode of the Rehab and Performance Lab podcast.

Debunking the Open Kinetic Chain Myths

For too long, there's been so much confusion around open kinetic chain (OKC) strengthening after ACL reconstruction. It feels like people have gone to one extreme or the other, saying OKC is unsafe, painful, inappropriate, or will cause graft problems. But as Dr. Snyder-Mackler so clearly puts it, to those concerns, I say: "No, no, no, and no!".

The research simply doesn't support these fears. In fact, historical concerns originated from outdated graft placement techniques, and these issues were incorrectly blamed on open-chain exercises. The good news is, today's evidence, including the newest ISO guidelines, is totally in favor of open kinetic chain exercises! These myths just persist, but they're not backed by what the research says.

Quadriceps Strength: The Undisputed King of ACL Recovery

If you want to know the number one predictor of success after ACL reconstruction, it's quadriceps strength – hands down! This isn't just about short-term recovery; it's about long-term outcomes, including reducing the risk of re-injury and osteoarthritis. As a matter of fact, as Dr. Snyder-Mackler highlighted, longevity research even says, "If you want to live a long life, be sure you have strong quads"! That’s a strong statement, but it’s the truth!

Functional appearance can be deceiving. Patients might look like they're doing well, but if we put them in the lab, we often see all kinds of adaptations and compensations. Why? Because they're shifting control away from the knee to the ankle and hip to achieve movement. This is why isolated quadriceps testing, ideally with tools like isokinetic dynamometry, is absolutely essential. If you're not measuring quad strength – and that doesn't mean some leg press, but actual isolated quads – you don't know if they're getting stronger! It breaks my heart when I hear patients have been discharged at six months, not feeling ready, and then I ask if they were strength tested or if they were doing isolated knee extensions, and the answer is "no, no, no!" We cannot diminish the importance of getting that quad strength back.

We even know that patients who recovered quad strength early never developed certain negative brain mapping changes that can happen after intra-articular knee injury! That's fascinating, right?

Embracing Strain: Essential for Graft and Tendon Healing

This is a big one: The absence of strain is not the goal for healing collagenous tissues like your new ACL graft or the donor tendon site! Think about it: too much strain, tissues can rupture. But too little strain, and they actually absorb. We need that sweet spot of optimal strain.

Some folks worry about OKC causing too much strain, but here's the reality: All exercise causes strain. Even just walking produces significant ACL strain, sometimes as much as 11-15%! And studies have shown that open chain knee extension with a boot actually produces similar strain levels (around 3.8%) as closed chain squats. The point is, controlled, purposeful strain is vital.

Why? Because tendons and ligaments, which are cousins in the body, don't heal properly unless they're given the right strains to help the scar tissue organize and line up along the lines of stress. If you're too conservative and don't apply strains, you can end up with a big, disorganized ball of scar tissue that's not strong. We need to apply those strains for the new collagenous tissue to heal and do its job!

And if you have patellar tendon pain from the graft harvest site? They use a pain-modified tendon model. This means if your pain is 5 out of 10 or lower, you keep going! If it's more, you modify, but it’s not about avoiding all pain. Absence of pain at a tendon injury site is not the goal. It’s a sick tendon that needs appropriate loading to reorganize! This, to me, makes an even stronger case for isolated open kinetic chain exercises, because you can get that direct loading without the compensatory patterns that come with painful closed-chain movements.

 

The Long Game: Why Quad Strength Matters for Life

Here’s something crucial: We tell our patients who've had these major intra-articular knee injuries that they should be doing quad strengthening exercises for the rest of their lives! That symbiosis between the quads and the knee doesn't just go away. We know that weak quads are strongly linked to osteoarthritis. Patients are already at risk for OA just from the traumatic knee injury, so maintaining strong quads is a vital protective measure!

When quads are weak, people walk with a stiff, quasiatic gait, truncating their range of motion and leading to higher ground reaction forces. They don't push off effectively, and the weaker their quads are, the stiffer their gait. You can't break that compensation pattern if their quads aren't strong enough! The body prioritizes getting around, no matter what compensations occur. But our goal should be to give them the foundation so they can move normally, not just compensate their way through. As I always say, the fundamentals win every time!

If you would like to learn more about strengthening after ACL Reconstruction and additional diagnoses throughout the body (shoulder, core, etc.) join us in the Coaches Club. Your Path of Mastery begins here.

 

You can listen to the episode at the links below. If you'd like CEUs, make sure to use the MedBridge link.

 

 

Are you looking to gain confidence in taking athletes from injury to high level performance? Looking to simplify the process and gain clarity? Wish you had a community to ask questions and bounce ideas off of? Check out the Coaches Club.

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