location_on Dr Sulaiman Al Habib, As Sahafah, Riyadh 13321, Saudi Arabia call +49 30 123 456 78
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  • Knee · Procedure

    Meniscus Repair

    Wherever the biology allows, a torn meniscus is stitched back together rather than removed — preserving the knee’s natural cushion and protecting it for the future.

    summarize At a glance
    Procedure type
    Arthroscopic (keyhole)
    Anaesthetic
    General or regional
    Stay
    Day case
    Recovery
    3–4 months
    Surgical procedure
    01

    What is meniscus repair?

    Meniscus repair is keyhole surgery that stitches a torn meniscus back together so it can heal, rather than removing the damaged portion. Because the meniscus protects the joint surface, keeping it intact lowers the long-term risk of arthritis.

    Not every tear is repairable — healing depends on the tear having access to a blood supply, which is richest at the outer rim. Where a repair is possible, it is almost always the preferred choice.

    02

    Who is it for?

    Repair is most successful for:

    • Tears in the outer, blood-supplied “red zone” of the meniscus.
    • Younger patients with healthy surrounding cartilage.
    • Acute tears, particularly those alongside an ACL reconstruction.
    • Longitudinal or “bucket-handle” tear patterns.
    info

    Repair vs. trim

    If a tear cannot heal, a partial trim (removing only the damaged fragment) may be the right answer instead. The decision is sometimes confirmed during the operation, once the tear can be seen directly.

    03

    How the procedure works

    Through small incisions, the surgeon inspects the tear with an arthroscope and passes specialised sutures across it to bring the edges together. The stitches hold the meniscus in place while the body heals the tear over the following weeks. When combined with an ACL reconstruction, both are completed in the same operation.

    04

    Recovery timeline

    A repair is protected more carefully than a trim, because the stitched tissue needs time to knit together.

    Weeks 0–6

    Protect

    A brace and limited weight-bearing or bending, to shield the healing repair.

    Weeks 6–12

    Restore motion

    Gradual return to full range of motion and normal walking.

    Months 3–4

    Strength & return

    Progressive strengthening and a graded return to sport, guided by symptoms.

    05

    Risks & outcomes

    Meniscus repair is a safe, well-established procedure. The main consideration is that not every repair heals — a small proportion may need further surgery — but a successful repair preserves the cushion that protects your knee for decades. General surgical risks, such as infection or stiffness, are uncommon and actively managed.

    Medically reviewed by
    Dr. Yousef Muhammad, M.D.
    Senior Consultant · Orthopedic Surgery & Sports Medicine

    German board-certified orthopedic surgeon specialising in arthroscopic knee and shoulder surgery, sports injuries, and joint replacement.

    M.D. · PhD
    FEBOT · DGOOC
    AAOS · ESSKA
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