location_on Dr Sulaiman Al Habib, As Sahafah, Riyadh 13321, Saudi Arabia call +49 30 123 456 78
Mon–Fri · 08:00–18:00
  • ar
  • en
  • Knee · Condition

    Patellar Instability

    When the kneecap slips out of its groove — partly or completely — it can be alarming and tends to recur. Understanding why it happens points the way to the right treatment.

    summarize At a glance
    Affected area
    Knee — kneecap (patella)
    Common in
    Teenagers & young adults
    Typical treatment
    Rehab or stabilisation
    Recovery
    3–6 months
    Kneecap anatomy
    01

    What is patellar instability?

    The kneecap normally glides up and down a groove (the trochlea) at the front of the thigh bone. In patellar instability, it slides out of that groove — usually towards the outer side — either partially (a subluxation) or completely (a dislocation).

    A first dislocation often follows a twist or a direct blow, but some people are predisposed by the shape of their anatomy. Once it has happened, the soft tissues that hold the kneecap in place can be stretched, making recurrence more likely.

    02

    Signs and symptoms

    • checkThe kneecap visibly shifting to the side, then often snapping back.
    • checkA sudden “giving way” with the knee buckling under load.
    • checkPain and rapid swelling after a dislocation episode.
    • checkApprehension and a fear that the kneecap will slip again.
    03

    Causes & risk factors

    • A shallow trochlear groove (trochlear dysplasia).
    • A kneecap that sits high or too far to the outer side.
    • Generally loose ligaments and muscle imbalance.
    • A previous dislocation, which raises recurrence risk.
    04

    How it is diagnosed

    Examination assesses how freely the kneecap can be pushed sideways and reproduces the patient’s apprehension. X-rays and an MRI then reveal the underlying anatomy — the depth of the groove, the position of the kneecap, and damage to the stabilising ligament (the MPFL) — which together guide whether surgery is needed.

    05

    Treatment options

    self_improvementNon-surgical

    Rehabilitation

    A first dislocation without major damage is usually treated with strengthening and bracing to restore control of the kneecap.

    healingSurgical

    MPFL reconstruction

    For recurrent instability, the key stabilising ligament is rebuilt with a graft to hold the kneecap in its groove.

    orthopedicsSurgical

    Bony realignment

    Where anatomy is the driver, the attachment of the kneecap tendon or the groove itself may be reshaped.

    info

    Treating the cause, not just the episode

    Because instability is often driven by anatomy, the right operation is chosen for each patient — addressing the specific reason their kneecap slips, rather than a one-size-fits-all repair.

    06

    Recovery & outlook

    After rehabilitation or surgery, a staged programme restores motion, then strength, then confidence in the knee. Most patients return to sport within three to six months. Modern stabilising surgery is highly effective at preventing further dislocations when the underlying cause is correctly addressed.

    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
    Speak with a specialist

    Concerned about your knee?
    Let's look at it properly.

    Every case is different. A precise diagnosis is the first step toward the most direct, evidence-based path back to the activities you care about.