Stebby
Cathlete
Hi, I would love to hear back from Cathe or anyone who may have gone through my experience.
I had 2 skiing accidents, one in 1993 and the second in 1999. The final result was a complete tear of my ACL. I had an ACL reconstruction on June 24, 1999. I went through physio, and had my last session in January. At the end of January, my surgeon gave me the OK to start returning to full activity. (At this time last year, my activities included downhill skiing, inline skating, part-time aerobics instruction 2X/week, weight training and elliptical trainer. I want to return to all of them.)
I'm having a hard time getting my strength back up. My cardio is pretty good; however, my operated leg is still quite a bit weaker than my good one. I also have patellar tendinitis in my operated leg; my surgeon told me that 80% of ACL reconstruction patients suffer from this, and it may continue for another year. I've also put on about 15 lbs., which doesn't seem to be coming off.
In December, I started doing exercise videos (for the first time!) -- I got several Firm tapes, and I just got Cathe's Body Max tape (which is amazing, by the way -- I did it for the first time the other day, and boy did I feel good at the end). I am really trying to work on my leg strength, with step work and lunges. My good leg is responding very well, and I can feel it getting stronger every week. However, my other leg does not seem to be improving noticeably. Also, the pain from the tendinitis is sometimes quite bad and I am afraid to really push for fear of hurting myself.
Can anyone give me some advice for how I can get better results, and get my operated leg "working properly" again?
Thanks very much.
Betsy
I had 2 skiing accidents, one in 1993 and the second in 1999. The final result was a complete tear of my ACL. I had an ACL reconstruction on June 24, 1999. I went through physio, and had my last session in January. At the end of January, my surgeon gave me the OK to start returning to full activity. (At this time last year, my activities included downhill skiing, inline skating, part-time aerobics instruction 2X/week, weight training and elliptical trainer. I want to return to all of them.)
I'm having a hard time getting my strength back up. My cardio is pretty good; however, my operated leg is still quite a bit weaker than my good one. I also have patellar tendinitis in my operated leg; my surgeon told me that 80% of ACL reconstruction patients suffer from this, and it may continue for another year. I've also put on about 15 lbs., which doesn't seem to be coming off.
In December, I started doing exercise videos (for the first time!) -- I got several Firm tapes, and I just got Cathe's Body Max tape (which is amazing, by the way -- I did it for the first time the other day, and boy did I feel good at the end). I am really trying to work on my leg strength, with step work and lunges. My good leg is responding very well, and I can feel it getting stronger every week. However, my other leg does not seem to be improving noticeably. Also, the pain from the tendinitis is sometimes quite bad and I am afraid to really push for fear of hurting myself.
Can anyone give me some advice for how I can get better results, and get my operated leg "working properly" again?
Thanks very much.
Betsy