Home » Lateral Collateral Ligament (LCL) Reconstruction

Lateral Collateral Ligament (LCL) Reconstruction

In my practice, I often see patients who say, “The pain is on the outer side of my knee, and it does not feel stable.” Sometimes that problem is a mild lateral knee sprain. But in more serious cases, the lateral collateral ligament, or LCL, is badly torn and the knee starts to open up abnormally on the outer side. When the ligament is too damaged to heal well or when the injury is part of a more complex pattern, LCL reconstruction may become an important treatment option. [1][2]

One important point I want Bangladeshi patients to understand is this: not every LCL injury needs surgery, and not every surgery on the lateral side of the knee is the same. Some patients improve with bracing and physiotherapy. Others have severe instability, combined ligament injury, or chronic giving-way symptoms that make reconstruction a more appropriate option. [1][2][3]

For patients in Dhaka and across Bangladesh, this type of injury may happen during football, cricket, road traffic accidents, falls, twisting injuries, or high-force trauma. The correct treatment depends on the grade of the tear, whether other structures are injured, and how stable the knee remains during daily activity. [1][2]

What the LCL does

The LCL is a strong cord-like ligament on the outer side of the knee. It connects the femur to the fibula and helps prevent the knee from bending outward too much under varus stress. It also contributes to control of posterolateral rotation. [2]

Why the LCL matters for stability

I usually explain to my patients that the LCL works like an important side restraint for the knee. It helps with:

  • side-to-side stability
  • control during turning
  • confidence on uneven ground
  • support when changing direction
  • restraint of abnormal outward bending

The LCL often does not get injured alone. Because it is closely related to the posterolateral corner, ACL, and PCL, a severe LCL tear may be part of a larger instability problem. [2]

How LCL injuries happen

When I evaluate patients with lateral knee injuries, I ask carefully about the direction of force.

Common causes

  • a blow to the inner side of the knee that pushes it outward
  • twisting on a planted foot
  • hyperextension trauma
  • sports collisions
  • road traffic accidents
  • falls from height or awkward falls during activity

AAOS notes that blows to the inside of the knee that push the knee outward may injure the LCL. [1] In Bangladesh, I also see these injuries after motorcycle crashes, football tackles, and missteps on uneven roads or stairs.

Symptoms of an LCL tear

The symptoms depend on whether the injury is mild, partial, or complete.

Common symptoms

  • pain on the outer side of the knee
  • swelling
  • tenderness along the lateral ligament
  • a feeling that the knee may give way
  • difficulty trusting the knee while walking or turning
  • bruising after more severe trauma

Symptoms that suggest a more serious injury

  • marked instability
  • inability to bear weight
  • numbness or tingling in the lower leg or foot
  • weakness lifting the foot
  • associated major swelling after trauma

In severe lateral-sided injuries, I pay close attention to possible common peroneal nerve involvement and to the possibility of a multiligament knee injury rather than an isolated LCL tear. [2][4]

Do all LCL tears need reconstruction?

No. Many do not.

Mild and moderate injuries

Grade 1 and some Grade 2 LCL injuries can often be treated without surgery, especially if the knee remains stable and there is no major associated injury. [2] Treatment may include:

  • temporary bracing
  • rest from aggravating activity
  • swelling control
  • physiotherapy
  • gradual return to walking and sport

When surgery becomes more likely

Surgery is considered more seriously when there is:

  • a Grade 3 complete tear
  • significant side-to-side instability
  • chronic instability after non-surgical care
  • associated ACL, PCL, or posterolateral corner injury
  • ligament avulsion from bone
  • high-demand activity goals with an unstable knee

AAOS notes that isolated LCL injuries may sometimes be treated similarly to MCL sprains, but surgery may be recommended, especially if the ligament has pulled directly off the bone or if other structures are involved. [1]

What LCL reconstruction means

LCL reconstruction is a surgery in which the damaged ligament is restored using graft tissue rather than simply relying on the torn ligament to heal on its own.

Why reconstruction may be preferred over repair

This is an important question. Some patients hear the words “repair” and “reconstruction” and think they are interchangeable. They are not.

  • Repair usually means reattaching or stitching the injured native tissue.
  • Reconstruction means creating a new stabilizing ligament using graft tissue.

In chronic cases, poor tissue quality, major instability, or combined posterolateral injuries, reconstruction is often favored over simple repair. In the multiligament-injured knee literature, repair has shown higher failure rates than reconstruction for fibular collateral ligament and posterolateral corner injuries. [4]

I usually explain to my patients that reconstruction is often chosen when the knee needs a stronger, more reliable restoration of stability rather than just a limited reattachment.

When I consider LCL reconstruction

When I evaluate patients with this problem, I think carefully about function, instability, and associated injury patterns.

Common reasons to discuss reconstruction

  • complete LCL rupture with obvious varus instability
  • injury involving the posterolateral corner
  • chronic outer-side knee looseness
  • persistent giving way after rehabilitation
  • combined ligament injury with ACL or PCL tear
  • failure of prior non-surgical treatment

StatPearls notes that Grade 3 LCL tears, multiligament injuries, chronic instability, or failed conservative management are common situations where surgical intervention is considered. [2]

How I assess a patient before surgery

Before recommending reconstruction, I need to understand the full instability pattern of the knee.

Clinical evaluation

I ask about:

  • how the injury happened
  • whether the knee buckles during walking or turning
  • whether there is difficulty on stairs or uneven ground
  • whether the patient feels instability during sport
  • whether there are nerve symptoms in the leg or foot

On physical examination, I assess:

  • lateral joint tenderness
  • varus laxity
  • posterolateral instability signs
  • range of motion
  • swelling
  • gait
  • nerve function in the foot and ankle

Imaging

X-rays

Sports Injury Care by Dr. Md. Iftekharul Alam

X-rays can identify associated fractures or avulsion injuries. AAOS notes that although X-rays do not show the ligament directly, they can show whether a piece of bone was pulled off during injury. [1]

MRI

MRI is especially important because it helps define whether the LCL is partially torn, completely torn, avulsed, or associated with other ligament and meniscal injuries. In real clinical practice, this imaging is often what separates a straightforward injury from a much more complex reconstructive case.

Isolated LCL injury versus combined lateral-side injury

This distinction matters a lot.

Isolated LCL tear

A true isolated LCL tear is relatively uncommon. StatPearls notes that isolated LCL injury occurs in less than 2% of knee injury cases. [2] These cases need careful evaluation because treatment decisions differ from multiligament injuries.

LCL with posterolateral corner injury

A patient may say “LCL tear,” but the real problem may include the posterolateral corner, which affects rotational stability and overall knee function much more significantly. If these injuries are missed, patients may remain unstable even if other parts of the knee are treated.

This is one reason why specialist assessment is so important before any surgical plan is finalized.

What happens during LCL reconstruction

The exact surgical technique varies depending on whether the injury is isolated or part of a posterolateral corner reconstruction.

General surgical principles

The operation aims to:

  • restore the correct course of the LCL
  • recreate lateral stability
  • protect the knee from abnormal varus opening
  • address associated ligament injuries when present

The graft may be taken from the patient’s own tissue or from donor tissue, depending on the case and surgical plan. In more complex injuries, reconstruction may be combined with treatment of the posterolateral corner, ACL, or PCL.

I usually explain to my patients that this is not a cosmetic procedure and not a quick fix. It is a structural stabilization surgery meant to give the knee a better chance of long-term function.

Recovery after LCL reconstruction

Patients often focus on the day of surgery, but the recovery period is just as important as the procedure itself.

Early recovery

The early phase usually involves:

  • brace protection
  • swelling control
  • careful pain management
  • crutch-assisted walking for a period
  • guided movement progression

Rehabilitation goals

Physiotherapy usually focuses on:

  • protecting the reconstruction
  • regaining full extension
  • gradually improving knee bending
  • restoring quadriceps and hamstring strength
  • improving balance and walking mechanics
  • progressing step by step toward return to activity

StatPearls emphasizes that a structured rehabilitation program tailored to the patient’s needs is essential for successful outcomes. [2]

For Bangladeshi patients, I also discuss real-life issues like long travel in traffic, stairs at home, prayer posture, workplace demands, and access to consistent physiotherapy. These practical details matter more than many people expect.

How long recovery takes

Recovery time varies depending on the severity of injury and whether the surgery involved only the LCL or a more complex lateral/posterolateral reconstruction.

I usually explain recovery in phases rather than in one simple number. Patients may begin safe walking and functional recovery progressively, but full confidence in cutting, pivoting, sports, or high-demand activity usually takes much longer than the first few weeks.

If the injury is combined with ACL, PCL, or posterolateral corner damage, the rehabilitation timeline becomes longer and more demanding.

Possible risks and limitations

I believe it is important to give patients a realistic picture.

Possible challenges after reconstruction

  • stiffness
  • residual instability
  • swelling during rehabilitation
  • slower-than-expected muscle recovery
  • persistent pain on the outer side of the knee
  • nerve-related symptoms in complex injuries
  • need for a prolonged rehab period

Not every patient returns to high-level sport in the same way. Some return very well, while others regain a strong daily-life knee but still notice limits during aggressive cutting or pivoting. Outcomes improve when the diagnosis is accurate, associated injuries are addressed properly, and rehabilitation is followed carefully. [2][4][5]

When urgent reassessment is needed

After injury, and also after surgery, patients should seek urgent medical review if they develop:

  • worsening pain not settling as expected
  • a cold, pale, or discolored foot
  • numbness or weakness in the toes or foot
  • severe calf swelling
  • fever or wound concerns
  • sudden major instability again

These symptoms should not be ignored.

Practical advice for patients and families in Dhaka

One important point I want Bangladeshi patients and families to understand is that successful recovery depends on planning, not only on the operation.

I usually advise patients to think ahead about:

  • who will help at home during the first recovery phase
  • how they will manage stairs
  • how they will attend physiotherapy regularly
  • how long office, field, or physical work may need adjustment
  • how to avoid returning to sports too early

Patients often feel better before the ligament is truly ready. That is a common reason for setbacks. I recommend following the rehabilitation progression rather than testing the knee too soon.

Related Topics

References

  1. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons. Collateral Ligament Injuries. Available at: https://orthoinfo.aaos.org/en/diseases–conditions/collateral-ligament-injuries/
  2. StatPearls. Lateral Collateral Ligament Knee Injury. NCBI Bookshelf. Available at: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK560847/
  3. Cleveland Clinic. Lateral Collateral Ligament (LCL) Tear: What Is It, Causes & Treatment. Available at: https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/21710-lcl-tears
  4. Levy BA, Dajani KA, Morgan JA, Shah JP, Dahm DL, Stuart MJ. Repair versus reconstruction of the fibular collateral ligament and posterolateral corner in the multiligament-injured knee. Am J Sports Med. 2010;38(4):804-809. Available at: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20118498/
  5. LaPrade RF, Spiridonov SI, Coobs BR, Ruckert PR, Griffith CJ. Fibular Collateral Ligament Anatomical Reconstructions: A Prospective Outcomes Study. Am J Sports Med. 2010;38(10):2005-2011. Available at: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0363546510370200

FAQs BY PATIENTS

An LCL tear is the injury itself. LCL reconstruction is a surgical treatment used when the ligament is too damaged, too unstable, or part of a more complex injury pattern that needs structural restoration.

Not every case is identical, but Grade 3 tears, chronic instability, multiligament injuries, and avulsion-type injuries are much more likely to need surgical treatment. [1][2]

Yes. This is very important. LCL injuries are often associated with posterolateral corner, ACL, or PCL injuries rather than being truly isolated. [2][4]

The key issues are instability, examination findings, MRI results, associated injuries, and whether the knee remains unreliable despite proper non-surgical treatment. A specialist evaluation is important for that decision.

Recovery is gradual and usually takes months, especially if there are associated ligament injuries. Early recovery focuses on protection and motion, while later recovery focuses on strength, balance, and functional confidence.

    Click to Chat
    Click to Chat
    Scroll to Top