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Treatment of Recurrent Patella Dislocation

In my practice, I often see young patients and families in Dhaka who say, “The kneecap came out once, and now it keeps feeling unstable.” That history is very important. A single patella dislocation can be painful and frightening, but when the kneecap keeps slipping out again or repeatedly feels as if it will move out of place, the problem becomes more than an isolated injury. It becomes recurrent patella dislocation or recurrent patellar instability. [1][2]

One important point I want Bangladeshi patients to understand is this: recurrent patella dislocation is not only about pain. It is also about instability, joint confidence, cartilage protection, and long-term knee function. If the kneecap keeps slipping out of its groove, the cartilage behind the kneecap and the front of the thigh bone can also be damaged over time. [1]

For this reason, treatment should not be based only on rest or pain medicine. It should be based on why the kneecap is unstable in the first place, how often it dislocates, what damage has already occurred, and whether the knee has underlying alignment or anatomical issues that need to be addressed. [1][3]

What recurrent patella dislocation means

The patella, or kneecap, normally glides in a groove at the front of the femur called the trochlea. When the knee bends and straightens, the patella should remain centered within that groove. Recurrent dislocation means the kneecap repeatedly slips out, usually toward the outside of the knee. [1]

Some patients have full dislocations, where the kneecap comes completely out and may need to be reduced. Others have repeated subluxations, where the kneecap partly slips and then returns. Both can be disabling.

Why recurrence happens

When I evaluate patients with this problem, I usually find one or more contributing factors:

  • injury to the medial patellofemoral ligament, or MPFL [1]
  • a trochlear groove that is too flat [1]
  • patella alta, where the kneecap sits too high [2]
  • abnormal alignment, such as knock-knee pattern or rotational malalignment [1]
  • ligamentous laxity [2]
  • muscle imbalance, especially weakness of the inner quadriceps support [2]

This is why the treatment is not the same for every patient.

Common causes in Bangladesh

In Dhaka and across Bangladesh, I commonly see patella dislocation after:

  • twisting while the foot is fixed on the ground
  • awkward landing during football, cricket, or badminton
  • slipping on wet floors or stairs
  • a fall during sports or daily activity
  • direct blow to the knee

AAOS notes that patellar dislocation often happens after a pivot, twist, or awkward fall, and it can also occur after a sharp blow to the kneecap. [1]

Symptoms of recurrent patella dislocation

Patients do not always describe the problem as “dislocation.” Sometimes they say:

  • “My kneecap feels like it wants to jump out.”
  • “The knee gives way.”
  • “I am afraid to bend or run.”
  • “It slips during stairs or squatting.”

Common symptoms

  • repeated dislocation episodes
  • a feeling of apprehension or insecurity in the kneecap [1]
  • pain around the front of the knee
  • swelling after episodes
  • clicking, catching, or instability
  • weakness and loss of confidence in the leg

In chronic cases, patients may also develop pain during kneeling, squatting, prayer movements, stair use, and sports. [2]

Why proper treatment matters

One important point I explain to my patients is that repeated dislocation is not harmless just because the kneecap “goes back in.”

Problems that can develop over time

  • cartilage injury behind the kneecap [1]
  • loose fragments of cartilage or bone [1]
  • repeated falls or giving-way episodes
  • chronic pain
  • long-term patellofemoral arthritis [1][3]

If recurrent instability is ignored for too long, treatment may become more complex than it needed to be earlier.

How I evaluate recurrent patella dislocation

When I evaluate patients with this problem, I do not rely on one symptom alone. I want to understand the full instability pattern.

History

I ask about:

  • how the first dislocation happened
  • how many times it has recurred
  • whether the kneecap reduced on its own
  • whether there was severe swelling
  • whether the knee locks or catches
  • whether sports, stairs, squatting, or fast walking trigger symptoms
  • whether there is family history of similar instability

Physical examination

On examination, I assess:

  • kneecap tracking
  • apprehension with lateral patella movement
  • alignment of the limb
  • quadriceps strength
  • hip control and muscle balance
  • generalized ligament laxity

AAOS notes that the doctor may assess walking, knee motion, weakness, and bone alignment around the kneecap. [1]

Imaging tests

X-rays

X-rays help assess patella position, bone anatomy, and alignment. [1]

MRI

MRI is often important to evaluate cartilage injury, loose fragments, MPFL injury, and overall knee anatomy. [1]

CT scan

In selected cases, CT helps define alignment problems more clearly, especially when the surgeon is concerned about bony maltracking. [1]

Non-surgical treatment

Not every patient with recurrent symptoms needs immediate surgery, but recurrent instability must be taken seriously.

When non-surgical care may be used

Non-surgical treatment is more commonly used:

  • after a first-time dislocation without major damage [1][3]
  • in milder instability patterns
  • when the anatomy is not severely abnormal
  • when symptoms are improving with rehabilitation

What non-surgical treatment includes

  • activity modification
  • short-term bracing
  • swelling and pain control
  • physiotherapy
  • gradual return to activity

StatPearls notes that physical therapy should focus on closed-chain exercises, quadriceps strengthening, and also hip and gluteal strengthening to improve femoral control and reduce Q-angle forces. [3]

I usually tell Bangladeshi patients that physiotherapy is not just “some exercises.” It should be structured, progressive, and matched to instability. Random exercise without proper guidance often does not solve the problem.

When surgery becomes more likely

Recurrent dislocation is one of the most important reasons to consider surgical stabilization.

Knee Care by Dr. Md. Iftekharul Alam

Common reasons to discuss surgery

  • repeated dislocations
  • chronic instability that affects daily life [3]
  • failure of good non-surgical treatment [3]
  • loose bodies or osteochondral injury [3]
  • severe maltracking
  • abnormal bony alignment

AAOS states that a recurring condition, where the patella continues to be unstable, is often corrected with surgery. [1]

How surgical treatment is chosen

This is where patients often become confused. There is not one single operation for every unstable kneecap.

The correct procedure depends on the cause of instability.

Soft-tissue stabilization

If the main problem is failure of the medial restraint, especially the MPFL, then a soft-tissue stabilization procedure may be appropriate.

MPFL reconstruction

This is one of the most common stabilization procedures for recurrent patellar instability. StatPearls notes that MPFL reconstruction is generally indicated for recurrent instability when there is no major malalignment or trochlear dysplasia driving the problem. [3]

I usually explain this simply: if the main strap that helps keep the kneecap from drifting outward is damaged and the rest of the alignment is acceptable, reconstruction of that restraint can help restore stability.

Bony realignment procedures

If the main problem is not only the ligament but the way the kneecap tracks because of bone alignment, then a bony procedure may be needed.

Tibial tubercle osteotomy

StatPearls notes that tibial tubercle transfer procedures may be used when there is maltracking and abnormal tibial tubercle to trochlear groove distance, especially when TT-TG is greater than 20 mm. [3]

This type of surgery changes the pull of the patellar tendon to help the kneecap track more safely.

Trochleoplasty

In selected severe cases with significant trochlear dysplasia, a trochleoplasty may be considered. StatPearls notes that this is used for abnormal tracking with J-sign caused by trochlear dysplasia, though it is a more specialized procedure and not appropriate for every patient. [3]

I usually explain to patients that this is not routine surgery for most unstable kneecaps. It is reserved for selected anatomical situations.

Combined procedures

Some patients need more than one correction at the same time. For example:

  • MPFL reconstruction plus tibial tubercle procedure
  • stabilization plus loose body removal
  • cartilage treatment plus patellar realignment

The treatment plan should match the actual cause of recurrence, not just the symptom of dislocation.

What happens if there is cartilage damage?

Recurrent dislocation may injure the cartilage on the underside of the kneecap or the front of the femur. [1]

If MRI or examination suggests:

  • loose cartilage fragments
  • osteochondral injury
  • persistent catching or locking

then surgery may also need to address those structures, not just stabilize the kneecap. StatPearls notes that loose bodies or osteochondral injury are important operative indications. [3]

Recovery after treatment

Recovery depends heavily on whether treatment is non-surgical or surgical, and on the specific procedure performed.

After non-surgical treatment

Patients often need:

  • swelling control
  • muscle reactivation
  • brace use for a period
  • physiotherapy
  • gradual return to sports and daily function

AAOS notes that after first-time dislocation, the goal is often return to normal activities within 1 to 3 months if recovery is progressing well. [1]

After surgery

Recovery is more structured and usually longer. Rehabilitation may include:

  • brace protection
  • progressive range-of-motion work
  • quadriceps strengthening
  • gait retraining
  • balance work
  • gradual return to running and sports only when safe

For Bangladeshi patients, I also discuss very practical issues such as:

  • climbing stairs at home
  • squatting and floor sitting
  • prayer movements
  • long traffic travel
  • school or office timing
  • sports coaching pressure

These everyday realities affect recovery more than many people expect.

Can recurrent patella dislocation be prevented from coming back?

Prevention depends on the cause.

Helpful measures may include

  • proper rehabilitation after the first episode
  • strengthening the quadriceps and hip muscles [3]
  • avoiding early return to sport
  • brace use in selected situations
  • addressing anatomical risk factors when they are severe

However, when a patient has already had repeated dislocations due to significant instability or abnormal anatomy, exercises alone may not fully solve the problem.

Long-term outlook

AAOS reports that outcomes after surgical treatment for recurrent instability are generally very good, with a re-dislocation rate of less than 10% for properly selected procedures. [1]

That said, I prefer to give patients a realistic picture:

  • not every painful kneecap needs surgery
  • not every unstable kneecap can be fixed by one small procedure
  • the result depends on diagnosis, anatomy, cartilage condition, and rehabilitation quality

When treatment is matched properly to the cause, many patients can regain a much more stable and confident knee.

When urgent assessment is needed

Seek urgent evaluation if:

  • the kneecap is still visibly out of place
  • the knee locks and cannot move normally
  • swelling becomes severe after a new episode
  • the foot becomes numb, weak, or unusually cold
  • there is a major fall with suspected fracture

Do not allow forceful manipulation by untrained people.

Related Topics

References

  1. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons. Patellar (Kneecap) Instability. Available at: https://orthoinfo.aaos.org/en/diseases–conditions/unstable-kneecap/
  2. StatPearls. Patella Dislocation. NCBI Bookshelf. Available at: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK538288/
  3. StatPearls. Patellar Instability. NCBI Bookshelf. Available at: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK482427/
  4. Sherwood Forest Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. Patella (kneecap) dislocation patient information leaflet. Available at: https://www.sfh-tr.nhs.uk/media/41qdash0/pil202409-02-pd-patella-dislocation.pdf

FAQs BY PATIENTS

It means the kneecap repeatedly slips out of place, usually toward the outside of the knee. Some patients have full dislocations, while others have repeated partial slips called subluxations. [1][3]

Sometimes mild instability improves with structured rehabilitation, but repeated true dislocations often need more detailed evaluation. If there is major maltracking, ligament injury, cartilage damage, or repeated episodes, exercise alone may not be enough.

Common reasons include MPFL injury, patella alta, a shallow trochlear groove, malalignment, ligament laxity, and muscle imbalance. [1][2][3]

Surgery is more likely when dislocation keeps recurring, when good rehabilitation has failed, when there is loose cartilage or bone injury, or when knee anatomy makes future dislocation very likely. [1][3]

No. MPFL reconstruction is common, but some patients need bony realignment procedures such as tibial tubercle osteotomy, and selected patients with severe trochlear dysplasia may need other corrective procedures. [1][3]

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