Originally Posted by altagirl
I think the longer you wait to start with straight leg raises, the worse it gets. Luckily, with my first surgery my doc wouldn't even let me out of the hospital until I could do a few. It was insanely painful an hour after my hamstring graft, but you get those muscles to fire before they "forget" how. He told me I had to bend it to 90 then too. I remember thinking he was out of his freaking mind asking me to do that stuff.
But after that one, I've gotten my post op instructions that involve "go home and rest and ice and take painkillers, and we'll start PT in a few days.. a week, whatever." And I ask if I can start PT earlier to begin with, and if not, if I can do SLR's, calf pumps, gentle stretching, etc. and then I go and do lots of that until I get to formal PT. No idea why more surgeons don't insist on people starting those things right away.
But you'll get it back. It's just a pain - literally. And mentally, honestly - to see how hard it is to get a big muscle like that to just WORK DAMMIT. Keep doing little quad sets at home all the time. You don't want to overdo SLR's or other real exercises, but my PT's have told me that if you're just sitting there and contracting the quad enough to make it move a little bit - you can do that all day long. Plus that and calf pumps help promote blood flow.
I'm assuming they have you using the little e-stim machine while doing bigger quad sets at PT - that's designed to get your quad (VMO in particular) to fire correctly.