DougPaul
Well-known member
It can be both range of motion and strength. I had ~6 months of PT following my broken leg and 11 weeks of no weight on the leg. We worked on strength and RoM the whole time. (Toward the end, I was only taking pain meds so the PT could lean as hard as she could on the joint...) I still have, and will likely always have, somewhat reduced knee flexibility. (The knee joint was not damaged in the accident--the damage was the result of two surgeries where they had to go in through the knee joint.)update - did get protocol printout fr knee PT folks
But ...
the real 'healing' only came about when i started using it and even pushing it a little
crazy how lame it felt before exercising and how much better it has started feeling since exercising it (after working thru a lil mild pain)
i guess it like other joints in that once you give it time to heal (8 weeks in my case) it becomes all about recovering range of motion
In effect, I'm still doing PT (exercises to strengthen the bad leg and ROM stretches for the knee) six years later...
Sounds like things are going well (or at least in the right direction).
Doug