Check this now: can you slowly straighten and bend your knee with no catching or locking? If it catches, locks, or won't straighten, book an urgent appointment, you may have a loose fragment. If it moves freely, you're likely safe to start gentle early motion and tighten the thigh muscle (quad sets).
Picture your kneecap as a train and the groove in your thigh bone as the track. In a normal knee the track is deep, so the train stays on it. If the track is shallow, flat, or set off to one side, a hard turn throws the train off the rail and tears the inner strap that holds it. You can train the driver to be smoother, but you can't re-dig the track with exercises.
Knee · Patellar Instability
Lateral patellar dislocation: the kneecap slips out of its groove toward the outside of the knee. Whether it happens again is set more by your knee's shape than by how hard you rehab.
Conviction: MODERATEEverything turns on two questions: is this your first dislocation or a repeat, and does your knee carry high-risk anatomy.
First-time dislocation, no loose body: conservative care. MODERATE Early protected motion, progressive quadriceps and hip strengthening, balance and control work, put weight on it as tolerated, and do not immobilize. The direction is well supported, but the exact sets-and-reps formula is not established in the research.
No single proven rep formula exists for this injury, so a therapist progresses you by how you respond, not by a fixed plan.
Recurrent instability: MPFL reconstruction. MODERATE-HIGH Surgery to rebuild the inner ligament is the lead option once it keeps dislocating. A 2026 high-quality trial found it beat rehab alone for stopping recurrence in patients without high-risk anatomy.
Tier 2 — anatomy-gated surgery. LOW-MODERATE Procedures matched to the specific anatomy: tibial tubercle osteotomy when the kneecap tendon pulls too far to the side (high TT-TG), trochleoplasty to deepen a severely flat groove (effective but with a real complication and stiffness burden), and distal femoral osteotomy for a knock-knee alignment. The exact thresholds for adding these are genuinely unsettled.
Tier 3 — adjuncts. Bracing and taping give short-term stability and confidence and can help early motion, but have not been shown to prevent future dislocations. Graft and technique variants (different tissue sources, single vs double strand) are broadly comparable with no clear winner.
Return to cutting and pivoting sport is earned by hitting criteria, not by the calendar.
Refer to: orthopedics (knee/sports) for recurrent instability, any suspected loose fragment, or a constantly-dislocating kneecap. Go to urgent care (A&E / ER) for a kneecap that won't relocate, a locked knee, or any nerve or circulation symptom.
Check this now: can you slowly straighten and bend your knee with no catching or locking?
If it catches, locks, or won't straighten, book an urgent appointment. You may have a loose fragment in the joint. If the knee moves freely and you've been cleared, you're likely safe to start gentle early motion and tighten the thigh muscle (a "quad set": press the back of your knee down and hold 5 seconds).
Takes less than 2 minutes. No equipment needed.The direction of care is clear, but two things keep this from HIGH: most of the surgical literature is lower-tier case series pooled into meta-analyses, and the conservative rehab evidence is thin with no validated exercise dose.
The 2026 trial that favored surgery deliberately excluded high-risk anatomy and is a single study. A larger trial including dysplastic, high-TT-TG patients could narrow or widen where surgery actually wins.
A large trial of first-time dislocators stratified by anatomy, comparing structured rehab to early reconstruction, with redislocation and arthritis tracked to 5 to 10 years.
Go Deeper
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Get free weekly protocolsThe kneecap (patella) glides in a groove on the front of the thigh bone called the trochlea. In the first part of a bend, before the kneecap drops into the bony groove, a ligament on the inner side, the medial patellofemoral ligament (MPFL), is the main thing stopping it sliding outward. A lateral dislocation tears or overstretches that MPFL in the majority of first events.
Here's the key point. The torn ligament is the injury, but the reason it tore, and usually re-tears, is the underlying bone and alignment: a shallow or flat groove (trochlear dysplasia, the single biggest risk factor), a high-riding kneecap (patella alta), a kneecap tendon that attaches too far to the outside (high TT-TG distance), extra outward rotation of the shin, and knock-knee alignment. Strength improves control around that anatomy. It does not change it.
Diagnosis is mostly from the story and the exam, not a scan. The tell is a discrete moment where the kneecap shifted toward the outside and often popped back, with a big swelling. That's different from the slow, achy front-of-knee pain of patellofemoral pain, and from the rotary giving-way of an ACL tear.
Resolution: conservative first for a first-time dislocation without a loose body. Surgery is reserved for a displaced fragment, or once it becomes recurrent.
Resolution: once it's recurrent, surgery is the more reliable anti-instability option. Rehab stays reasonable for those declining surgery. One narrow trial, needs replication.
Research finding: meta-analyses report low redislocation and high return-to-sport after surgery.
Real-world gap: most of it pools case series, and the choice of operation is confounded by the very anatomy that drives the choice.
Read surgical comparisons as anatomy-dependent decisions, not universal rankings.
Research finding: rehabilitation improves function after dislocation.
Real-world gap: there is "no single best plan" and no validated rep-and-set protocol to quote.
Prescribe by principle (early motion, progressive quad and hip loading, no immobilization) and progress by response.
Research finding: surgery beat rehab for recurrence.
Real-world gap: it excluded severe dysplasia and high TT-TG, so it doesn't answer what to do for the worst-anatomy patient.
Don't generalize that result to high-risk-anatomy knees.
"Managed conservatively" is not the same as "won't happen again." After a first dislocation, recurrence runs to roughly 40 to 50% overall, and it is concentrated in patients with high-risk anatomy. A first-timer with a normal-shaped groove has a much lower risk than one with a severely flat groove plus a high-riding kneecap.
So the honest split is this. For a first dislocation with no loose fragment, most people are managed without surgery and immobilizing the knee does not help. Once it becomes recurrent, surgery (led by MPFL reconstruction) is the more reliable way to stop it, and the rehab team's job shifts toward building the strength, control, and confidence to return safely around that decision.
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