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Meniscal root repair is a specialized knee surgery used to reattach a torn meniscal root back to bone. In my practice, I often explain to patients that the meniscal root is not a small unimportant edge of the meniscus. It is the anchoring point that allows the meniscus to function properly as a shock absorber and load distributor inside the knee. When that root tears, the meniscus can lose its normal function in a major way [1][2].

This is why meniscal root tears are taken seriously. Current orthopedic literature describes a meniscal root tear as biomechanically similar to losing the meniscus function altogether, because the meniscus can no longer convert joint forces into normal hoop stress [2][3]. In practical terms, that means knee pressure rises, cartilage overload increases, and arthritis may progress faster if the problem is left untreated [2][4].

For Bangladeshi patients and families, this matters because meniscal root tears can affect basic daily life, not only sports. The knee may hurt during stairs, squatting, rising from the floor, prayer movements, village or city walking, office commuting, and family responsibilities. This article explains what meniscal root repair means, when it may be recommended, and what recovery realistically involves.

What Is a Meniscal Root Tear?

Each knee has two menisci, the medial meniscus on the inside and the lateral meniscus on the outside. These structures help spread load, improve stability, and protect cartilage.

What is the “root”?

The root is the attachment site where the meniscus is fixed to the tibia. If this root tears, the meniscus can extrude or shift away from its normal position and no longer protect the joint effectively [2][4].

Why is a root tear different from an ordinary meniscus tear?

A standard meniscus tear and a root tear are not the same. With a root tear, the mechanical consequence can be much more significant. Reviews on meniscal root injuries consistently emphasize that a root tear is functionally equivalent to total meniscectomy if left untreated, because the meniscus loses its hoop stress function [2][3].

That is one of the main reasons I do not treat all meniscus tears in the same way.

Symptoms of a Meniscal Root Tear

Symptoms can vary, but common complaints include:

  • pain deep inside the knee joint
  • pain with squatting or stair climbing
  • swelling
  • difficulty walking comfortably
  • a painful popping event during twisting
  • reduced confidence in the knee
  • pain when rising from low sitting or floor level

Some patients describe a specific twist injury. Others, especially middle-aged patients, may develop symptoms with less dramatic movement.

Who Gets Meniscal Root Tears?

These tears can happen in different patterns.

Common patient groups

  • younger patients with sports-related twisting injuries
  • patients with ACL injury, especially involving the lateral meniscus root
  • middle-aged patients with degenerative medial meniscus posterior root tears
  • patients with early cartilage overload but not yet end-stage arthritis

In my practice, I pay special attention when a patient has sudden knee pain after twisting but the MRI suggests more than a routine meniscus injury. Root tears can be missed if we are not careful.

Why Meniscal Root Repair Matters

One important point I want Bangladeshi patients to understand is that this surgery is usually about joint preservation, not just short-term pain relief.

What happens if the root is not functioning?

Without a functioning meniscal root:

  • the meniscus can extrude outward
  • the knee compartment loses shock-absorbing protection
  • cartilage pressure rises
  • arthritis can progress faster

Mayo Clinic notes that after a root tear, the affected compartment effectively loses functional meniscus support, and continued weight bearing can overload bone and cartilage [4]. That is why repair is often considered early in appropriate patients.

When Meniscal Root Repair May Be Recommended

Not every root tear should automatically be repaired, but many are considered for repair when the knee still has reasonable preservation potential.

Common reasons to consider repair

  • acute root tear in an active patient
  • symptomatic root tear with minimal arthritis
  • meniscal extrusion with a repairable root tear
  • associated ligament injury, such as ACL reconstruction setting
  • ongoing pain and functional limitation with a root tear confirmed on MRI and clinical evaluation

Mayo Clinic emphasizes that meniscus root repair generally focuses on knees with minimal arthritis and that overall joint health matters more than age alone when determining suitability [4].

When repair may be less suitable

I become more cautious when a patient has:

  • advanced arthritis
  • major joint space narrowing
  • very poor cartilage condition
  • severe malalignment not being addressed
  • poor surgical fitness
  • inability to follow a strict rehabilitation program

This is important because meniscal root repair is not just a technically successful surgery problem. It is a whole-knee decision.

How I Diagnose a Meniscal Root Tear

Diagnosis depends on careful history, examination, and imaging.

Clinical evaluation

When I evaluate patients with suspected root tears, I look for:

  • joint line tenderness
  • swelling or effusion
  • pain with deep flexion
  • pain during squatting or rising
  • signs of associated ligament injury
  • mechanical symptoms

MRI and imaging

MRI is extremely helpful in identifying root tears and associated extrusion, cartilage damage, or ligament injury. Plain X-rays are also useful to assess arthritis, alignment, and whether the knee still appears suitable for preservation-focused treatment.

This is especially important in Bangladesh, where many patients first try medication, rest, or informal treatment for weeks before getting the proper imaging. Delay can allow the knee to deteriorate further.

What Is Meniscal Root Repair Surgery?

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