Knee Meniscus Tear Resolved Without Surgery | Genesis Ortho Chicago

CASE STUDY 01  ·  Orthopedic Urgent Care / Workers’ Compensation

From Cane to Cleared: Knee Pain Resolved in 10 Weeks

Medial Meniscus Tear + Baker’s Cyst · Chicago, IL


⚠️ Privacy Note: All patient details are anonymized. Age, occupation, and clinical details are used with permission for educational purposes only.


63

Patient Age

10 Weeks

Treatment Duration

100%

Return to Work

0

Surgeries Required


  PATIENT BACKGROUND


Age

63 years old


Occupation

Housekeeper — physically demanding role requiring standing, kneeling, and repetitive movement


Chief Complaint

Worsening right knee pain beginning late December, initially suspected to be a gout flare


Insurance

Workers’ Compensation case — no light duty available at employer


  THE PROBLEM


In late December, a 63-year-old housekeeper began experiencing progressively worsening pain in her right knee. Her initial assumption — and that of her primary care provider — was that this was a gout flare, a condition she had experienced before.

When conservative measures failed to provide relief, she came to Genesis Orthopedics in January for a specialist evaluation. Despite initial treatment with oral steroids and activity modification, the pain persisted at a level that required:


  • Use of a cane for mobility

  • Knee bracing for daily activities

  • Full time off work — no light duty was available through her employer


An MRI was ordered to get a definitive diagnosis. Results revealed a medial meniscus tear with an associated Baker’s cyst — a fluid-filled sac behind the knee that commonly develops alongside meniscus damage. This confirmed that this was not a gout flare at all, but a structural orthopedic injury requiring targeted treatment.


🗓️  TREATMENT TIMELINE


Late Dec

Onset of Symptoms

Worsening right knee pain — initially thought to be gout flare. Started conservative measures.


January

First Visit at Genesis Orthopedics

Evaluated by Genesis orthopedic team. Oral steroids and activity modification prescribed. Symptoms persisted.


January–Feb

Diagnostic Workup

MRI ordered and completed. Results: medial meniscus tear + Baker’s cyst confirmed. Cane use, bracing, and work absence required during this period.


February

Surgical Consultation + Injection Trial

Evaluated by Genesis surgeon. Surgery was NOT recommended at this stage. Corticosteroid injection trial initiated + 3 weeks off work prescribed to allow recovery.


March

Follow-Up: Full Recovery

Symptoms fully resolved. Patient cleared to return to work without restrictions. No surgery required.


  GENESIS TREATMENT APPROACH


The Genesis orthopedic team took a conservative-first approach to this case — which is central to how we treat musculoskeletal injuries at every stage.


Rather than defaulting to surgery for a diagnosed meniscus tear, the treating surgeon evaluated the full clinical picture and determined that a corticosteroid injection trial combined with structured rest could resolve the condition non-surgically.


This approach reflects several core principles of care at Genesis:


  • Conservative treatment first — surgery only when conservative options have been exhausted

  • Accurate diagnosis drives treatment — MRI confirmed the true cause (meniscus tear) vs. the assumed cause (gout)

  • Workers’ compensation expertise — Genesis managed the case documentation, work restriction paperwork, and return-to-work clearance

  • Coordinated care — from initial evaluation through imaging, injection, recovery, and final clearance, all managed within the Genesis system


  PATIENT OUTCOME


  Patient Outcome

  • Symptoms fully resolved within 10 weeks of first Genesis visit

  • Returned to full-duty work as a housekeeper — no restrictions

  • No surgery required — resolved with corticosteroid injection + rest

  • Avoided costly ER visits throughout the treatment process

  • Workers’ compensation case successfully documented and managed

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