Knee · Sports injury

Lateral Meniscus Tear

Tear of the outer cartilage cushion of the knee.

Cared for across all 6 OSI locations

Overview

what it is and why it matters
MRI demonstrating a tear of the lateral meniscus of the knee
MRI of meniscal tear Harrygouvas. CC BY-SA 3.0

The lateral meniscus is the O-shaped fibrocartilage on the outer side of the knee. It covers a larger portion of the tibial plateau than the medial meniscus and is more mobile, which makes it somewhat less prone to degenerative tears but more prone to certain acute tear patterns. Lateral meniscus tears commonly occur in combination with ACL tears.

A discoid lateral meniscus — a congenital variant where the meniscus is abnormally wide and disc-shaped — is more prone to tearing and can cause the characteristic "clunking knee" in children and young adults.

Diagnosis

exam first, imaging second

Lateral joint-line tenderness, pain on squatting and deep knee flexion, and a positive McMurray test at the lateral compartment suggest lateral meniscus involvement. MRI confirms the diagnosis, identifies the tear type, and evaluates the ACL and lateral compartment cartilage.

Treatment Path

how care progresses at OSI
1

Activity modification

Reducing squatting, deep flexion, and pivoting activities while symptoms settle.

2

Physical therapy

Strengthening and load management.

3

NSAIDs

Acute symptom control.

Surgical Options at OSI

if non-operative care isn't enough

Same indications as medial meniscus: mechanical symptoms, persistent pain, locked knee, or a repairable tear in a young patient. Combined ACL-lateral meniscus tears are generally repaired at the time of torn ACL is removed arthroscopically and replaced with a tendon graft — most commonly patellar tendon (bone-tendon-bone), hamstring, or quadriceps — passed through precisely drilled tunnels in the femur and…">ACL reconstruction.

Providers Who Treat Lateral Meniscus Tear

sports-medicine team

Michael S. Vrana, M.D.

David B. Templin, M.D.

Trent Twitero, M.D.

Further Reading

authoritative sources

External patient-education references and related OSI pages for additional background:

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