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Microfracture Surgery

Microfracture surgery is a cartilage repair procedure used to treat selected focal articular cartilage defects, most often in the knee. In simple language, the surgeon cleans the damaged cartilage area and makes very small holes in the bone underneath. This allows bone marrow elements to come into the defect and form a repair clot, which can help cover the damaged area with repair tissue over time. [1][2]

In my practice, I usually explain to patients that microfracture surgery is not a general treatment for every kind of knee pain or every type of arthritis. It is mainly considered for specific cartilage defects in properly selected patients. For the right patient, it may reduce pain and improve function. But it also has limitations, and the rehabilitation after surgery is extremely important. [1][3]

For Bangladeshi patients and families, the biggest confusion is often this: “If my MRI says cartilage damage, does that mean I need microfracture surgery?” The answer depends on the size, depth, location, symptoms, alignment, stability, age, activity level, and overall condition of the knee. The name of the procedure alone is not enough to decide treatment.

What Is Microfracture Surgery?

Microfracture is a bone marrow stimulation technique. The goal is not to transplant cartilage from somewhere else, but to create an environment where the body can form repair tissue over the damaged area. During the procedure, the damaged cartilage edges are prepared, and small holes are made in the underlying bone so marrow cells can enter the defect and begin the repair process. [1][2][4]

This repair tissue is not identical to normal native articular cartilage. That is one reason patient selection and realistic expectations matter. [1][3]

What Kind of Problem Is It Used For?

Microfracture is mainly used for symptomatic focal cartilage lesions, often in the knee. These are localized areas of cartilage loss rather than advanced, widespread arthritis affecting the whole joint. [1][2]

Conditions where it may be considered

  • Focal full-thickness cartilage defects
  • Some cartilage injuries after trauma
  • Selected osteochondral lesions
  • Some cases related to osteochondritis dissecans
  • Carefully selected smaller lesions in lower-demand patients [1][2][3]

One important point I want Bangladeshi patients to understand is that microfracture is not the same as treatment for severe, generalized osteoarthritis. A knee with diffuse advanced arthritis is a different problem and usually needs a different treatment pathway. [1][5]

Which Joint Is Most Commonly Treated?

When most patients ask about microfracture surgery, they are asking about the knee. That is where it is most commonly discussed in cartilage restoration practice. However, similar principles may also be used in selected lesions of other joints.

In this article, I am focusing mainly on knee microfracture, because that is the most relevant and practical context for most patients in Dhaka and Bangladesh.

Who May Be a Suitable Candidate?

Microfracture surgery works best in selected patients, not in everyone with cartilage damage.

Patients who may be considered

  • Younger or middle-aged patients
  • People with a small focal cartilage defect
  • Patients with persistent symptoms despite non-surgical treatment
  • Those with reasonably good knee alignment and stability
  • Patients who can follow a strict rehabilitation protocol [1][2][3]

I usually explain to my patients that the knee environment matters a lot. If there is untreated malalignment, major instability, large meniscal loss, or widespread arthritis, microfracture alone may not give the result a patient hopes for.

Who May Not Be a Good Candidate?

Microfracture may be less suitable in:

  • Large cartilage defects
  • Diffuse degenerative arthritis
  • High-demand athletes with certain larger lesions
  • Significant malalignment
  • Major untreated ligament instability
  • Patients unable to comply with rehabilitation [1][3][6]

Recent evidence also suggests that microfracture has limited long-term efficacy for medium to large knee chondral defects, which is an important point when discussing expectations and alternatives. [6]

What Symptoms Can a Cartilage Defect Cause?

Patients with a focal cartilage lesion may have:

  • Knee pain with walking, stairs, squatting, or sports
  • Swelling after activity
  • Catching or mechanical discomfort
  • Difficulty running or pivoting
  • Reduced sports performance
  • Pain that continues despite rest or simple treatment

The symptoms are not unique to cartilage defects, which is why proper evaluation is necessary. Meniscus tears, ligament problems, osteoarthritis, or patellofemoral disorders can also produce overlapping symptoms.

How I Evaluate a Patient Before Recommending Microfracture

When I consider microfracture surgery, I do not focus only on the MRI report. I look at the whole knee and the whole patient.

Important parts of evaluation

  • History of injury and symptoms
  • Physical examination
  • Exact location and size of the defect
  • Knee alignment
  • Ligament stability
  • Meniscal status
  • Activity goals
  • X-rays and MRI [1][2][3]

In my practice, I often explain that a cartilage procedure is more likely to work when the rest of the knee mechanics are favorable. If the knee has several unresolved structural problems, simply doing microfracture may not be enough.

How Is the Surgery Done?

Microfracture is usually performed arthroscopically. A camera is inserted into the joint through small incisions, and the surgeon identifies the cartilage defect.

Basic surgical steps

  • Unstable damaged cartilage is cleaned from the defect
  • The edges are shaped to create a stable border
  • Tiny holes are made in the subchondral bone
  • Marrow elements bleed into the defect and form a clot [2][4]

That clot is an important part of the repair process. Protecting it during rehabilitation is one reason postoperative instructions are so important.

What Are the Advantages of Microfracture Surgery?

Potential advantages

  • Arthroscopic and relatively less invasive
  • Does not require cartilage harvesting from another site
  • May improve symptoms in selected small focal defects
  • Can be an option in carefully selected patients early in the cartilage treatment pathway [1][2]

Knee Care by Dr. Md. Iftekharul Alam

Because the technique is widely known and comparatively straightforward, many patients hear about it early. But that does not mean it is automatically the best option for every cartilage defect.

What Are the Limitations?

Microfracture has important limitations that patients should understand clearly.

Important limitations

  • The repair tissue is not the same as normal native cartilage [1][3]
  • Results may decline over time in some patients [3][6]
  • Larger defects tend to do worse [6]
  • High-demand return to sport may be unpredictable [7]
  • Prior microfracture can affect future cartilage restoration options [1]

I believe patients deserve honesty here. Microfracture can help the right patient, but it is not a guaranteed long-term solution for every lesion.

Is Microfracture Better Than OATS, Mosaicplasty, or ACI?

This is a very common question, and the answer depends on the defect and the patient.

General comparison

  • Microfracture stimulates repair from bone marrow
  • OATS or mosaicplasty transfers cartilage and bone plugs
  • ACI uses cartilage cell-based restoration

Each option has different strengths, limitations, indications, and cost or complexity considerations. Some studies have shown that cell-based or graft-based techniques may perform better than microfracture in certain settings, especially for larger lesions or longer-term outcomes. [3][8]

In my practice, I usually tell patients not to focus only on which procedure sounds newer or more advanced. The most important question is which procedure best matches the lesion and the person’s goals.

Recovery After Microfracture Surgery

Recovery is one of the most important parts of the outcome.

Why rehabilitation is so important

The marrow clot created during surgery needs time and protection. If the repaired area is overloaded too early, the result may be compromised. That is why rehabilitation after microfracture is often more restrictive than patients expect. [2][4][7]

Recovery usually includes

  • Controlled range of motion
  • Carefully guided physiotherapy
  • Temporary protection from full loading, depending on the lesion
  • Gradual strengthening
  • Slow return to sports or impact activity [2][7]

For Bangladeshi patients, this has real daily-life implications. Stairs, commuting, prayer movements, work leave, household duties, and travel planning all matter. I often tell families that a successful cartilage surgery is not only about the operation. It is also about whether the patient can realistically follow the recovery plan.

What Results Can Patients Expect?

Results vary widely depending on:

  • Age
  • Size and location of the lesion
  • Body weight
  • Activity demands
  • Knee alignment and stability
  • Quality of rehabilitation
  • Whether the defect is traumatic or degenerative [3][6][7]

Some patients do quite well, especially with smaller lesions and careful rehabilitation. But long-term durability is not uniform, especially in larger or more demanding cases. That is why I try to set realistic expectations from the beginning.

What Are the Risks or Complications?

As with any surgery, microfracture has risks.

Possible risks include

  • Persistent pain
  • Swelling
  • Stiffness
  • Incomplete healing
  • Failure of symptom relief
  • Progression of joint symptoms over time
  • Need for later procedures [2][3][6]

There are also the usual surgical risks of arthroscopy, such as infection or blood clots, although these are not unique to microfracture.

When Should You Seek Urgent Medical Advice After Surgery?

After surgery, urgent medical attention is important if there is:

  • Fever with wound concerns
  • Increasing redness or discharge
  • Severe calf pain or swelling
  • Sudden shortness of breath
  • Severe uncontrolled pain
  • Major new numbness or weakness

These symptoms do not always mean a serious complication, but they should never be ignored.

What Non-Surgical Treatment Comes Before Microfracture?

Microfracture is usually not the first step for every cartilage lesion.

Non-surgical treatment may include

  • Activity modification
  • Physiotherapy
  • Weight management if relevant
  • Pain control
  • Addressing biomechanics and muscle weakness

Some patients improve enough without surgery, while others continue to have disabling symptoms and need further discussion about cartilage restoration procedures.

Questions I Encourage Patients to Ask

Before agreeing to microfracture surgery, I encourage patients and families to ask:

  • Is my cartilage damage focal or widespread?
  • How large is the defect?
  • Is microfracture the best option for my lesion?
  • What will rehabilitation actually involve?
  • How long before I can return to work, travel, or sports?
  • What happens if microfracture is not successful?
  • Are there other cartilage restoration options that fit my case better?

These are practical questions, and they matter as much as the technical name of the operation.

Related Topics

References

  1. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons. Articular Cartilage Restoration. Available at: https://orthoinfo.aaos.org/en/treatment/articular-cartilage-restoration
  2. Steadman JR, Rodkey WG, Briggs KK. The microfracture technique in the management of complete cartilage defects in the knee joint. Available at: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11826923/
  3. Orth P, Rey-Rico A, Venkatesan JK, et al. Microfracture for medium size to large knee chondral defects has limited long-term efficacy: A systematic review. Available at: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39429888/
  4. NCBI Bookshelf. Osteochondral Autograft Transplantation. Available at: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/books/NBK560655/
  5. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons. Arthritis of the Knee. Available at: https://orthoinfo.aaos.org/en/diseases–conditions/arthritis-of-the-knee/
  6. Mithoefer K, McAdams T, Williams RJ, Kreuz PC, Mandelbaum BR. Clinical efficacy of the microfracture technique for articular cartilage repair in the knee: an evidence-based systematic analysis. Available at: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21160071/
  7. Hurley ET, Davey MS, Jamal MS, et al. Return to Play Criteria Following Surgical Management of Osteochondral Defects of the Knee: A Systematic Review. Available at: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9280827/
  8. Devitt BM, Bell SW, Webster KE, Feller JA, Whitehead TS. Autologous Chondrocyte Implantation Versus Microfracture in the Knee: A Meta-analysis and Systematic Review. Available at: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31708355/

FAQs BY PATIENTS

It is a procedure where small holes are made in the bone under a cartilage defect so marrow cells can enter the damaged area and form repair tissue. It is used for selected focal cartilage problems, most commonly in the knee. [1][2]

Not usually for widespread advanced arthritis. It is mainly used for selected focal cartilage defects, not for a knee where the cartilage damage is already diffuse across the joint. [1][5]

Recovery varies, but it often takes months and requires strict rehabilitation. Return to high-impact activity is gradual and depends on the lesion, the joint involved, and the progress of healing. [2][7]

It can provide symptom relief for some patients, especially in selected smaller lesions, but results may decline over time in others. It is important to understand that long-term durability is not the same for every patient. [3][6]

That depends on the location and size of the cartilage defect and your surgeon’s rehabilitation protocol. Some patients need restricted loading for a period to protect the repair clot. You should follow the specific postoperative instructions given for your case.

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