Originally Posted by
walker100
So, my surgeon insisted I was 100% non-weight bearing for six weeks. Moving around meant I needed two crutches, with the injured leg in a fixed brace. Didn't even touch my right toes on the ground for balance. (I can now hop pretty good on my left leg.) I used an e-stim device daily to keep my right quads doing something. At the six week mark (after x-rays showing that the fracture repair was good) I was cleared for partial weight-bearing, which meant still using two crutches to move, but I could now put some weight through the right leg. At seven weeks, the PT suggested dropping one of the crutches, and a day later (yesterday) I found my way to our home gym for the first time in a couple of months. I managed three sets of five deadlifts at the non-award winning weight of 50 kg. Nothing snapped or fell off, and a day later my knee is feeling fine. My friends on the Facebook tibia-plateau-fracture support group are horrified with any sort of gym work at this stage. Every injury is different, but large numbers of that group are stalled in their recovery, months or even years after their initial injury, because the prevailing groupthink is that you need six months plus of recovery before you can do anything significant with the repaired leg.