Rehabilitation following Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction (ACL) continues to be a exciting and popular topic in orthopedics and sports medicine. Just pick up any journal and you are bound to find at least one article on the ACL in each issue!
Over the past decade, Kevin Wilk, James Andrews, and I have continuously adapted and expanded our preferred treatment guidelines following ACL reconstruction. Kevin has published many classic manuscripts on the topic and we collectively have presented our treatment program several times in journal articles the last decade.
Since these publications, Kevin and I have continued to advance our rehabilitation protocol.
I am pleased to announce that we have officially just released our latest protocol for Accelerated Rehabilitation Following ACL Reconstruction with our latest protocols at RehabilitationProtocols.com.
But because our ACL reconstruction rehabilitation protocol is one of our most popular, we simple want to give it away for free!
But first, take a quick look at this video to see the building our our ACL protocols. I share an inside look at our Rehabilitation Protocols:
Rehabilitation Protocol Following ACL Reconstruction
If you are interested in using the protocols that I have helped develop with Kevin Wilk and Dr. James Andrews, we have recently revised and expanded all of our protocols and made them completely online and downloadable. Our protocols have been published in several journals over the years and based on our decades of research, scientific evidence, and experience.
They are the most widely used and respected rehabilitation protocols today.
Want to see what our protocols include? You can download our 3 most popular protocols for FREE:
- Accelerated rehabilitation following ACL reconstruction using a patellar tendon autograft
- Rehabilitation following arthroscopic rotator cuff repair for a type II medium-large sized tear
- Thrower’s ten exercise program
Our entire collection includes over 175 nonoperative, preoperative, postoperative protocols for shoulder, elbow, hip, knee, foot, and ankle. There are several variations of many protocols to account for many specific procedures and concomitant surgeries. Plus, we have several of our exercise handouts and interval return to sport programs.
If you work in an outpatient orthopedic or sports medicine clinic, these protocols are an invaluable resource to help guide your treatment approach.