I'd need a diagnosis.
Just using the template provided.
Age,19 year old male Gender Male, current training status (sqautting just over bodyweight of 145 pounds for 3X5)
- Chief Complaint Sharp pains in left knee when walking down and up stairs and when carrying daughter, hurt to sqaut with empty bar recently.)
- Narrative describing the mechanism of injury: In your own words, Straightened out left leg with 145 pounds on back, sqautting high- bar ass to grass missed the rack and let my left leg save me. Hurt in front upper left leg was a dull ache now just occasion random sharp pain when getting up/carrying things/walking.
- Pain (on a scale of 1-10 is 8),
- Describe the pain (sharp)
- What makes it better? Resting
- What makes it worse? Carrying anything
- How do your symptoms behave throughout the day? Worst when having to walk stairs, hills or carry toddler.
- Signs and Symptoms (knee x-ray shows no fracture) still cant sqaut and for some reason even overhead press hurts a little?
Has anyone got any idea what happened or what I should do/ask for until the physio? Have booked in with a sports physio but will have to wait as his one of the few sports physio in our area with decent pricing.
I'd need a diagnosis.
You'll need an MRI for a correct diagnosis by a "physiotherapist", one generated by a radiologist reading the MRI. A physio cannot do this properly. But really, it will heal without a diagnosis. You have probably figured this out yourself if you've READ THIS BOARD.
In my country (Australia) I don't think you can go directly to a radiologist without a script from a physio/dr. I tried to search advice about physio's/ knee injurys and the like via the google site search but couldnt find a relevant thread to my situation (missing the pins/ straightened limb). I did find that others stating you werent a fan of physiotherapy though I dont know if chiro's are well regulated/relevant or if this or more of an ibuprofen/rest/bill starr rehab deal. If it does get any better I will skip the physio though the pain has stayed for just under a month.
Seeing as sqauts and deadlifts with decent weight are painful at the moment and seem to be essential to the program so I'm wondering if there is anything I could do beyond eating to not lose progress on those lifts? Some threads resulting from searches seem to have people focusing on upper body but is there anything you'd advise to keep my back working?
Develop a better tolerance for pain. It will come in handy.
Money will let you see a radiologist without a referral. Do you have money?