ACLR Rehab
Evolved
ELEVATE YOUR PRACTICE
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CLINICIAN-DRIVEN
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EVIDENCE-LED
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ELEVATE YOUR PRACTICE ↖︎ CLINICIAN-DRIVEN ↖︎ EVIDENCE-LED ↖︎
Are you struggling to get consistent outcomes with your athletes after ACL reconstruction?
ACLR is one of the most heavily researched areas in sports medicine, yet the volume of information can feel overwhelming and often contradictory. If you’re encountering the common challenges of ACL rehabilitation, this course will give you the clarity, skillset, and structured approach needed to confidently treat post-operative ACL athletes — and do so at the forefront of current best practice.
Where Clinicians Often Get Stuck — And What We Solve:
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You want to provide evidence-based ACLR rehab, but finding time to sort through research is hard.
This course consolidates the most current and clinically relevant literature — with over 250 articles, curated podcasts, and CE resources — so you can stay informed without overwhelm.
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Progressions for running, jumping, cutting, and pivoting often feel vague or contradictory.
We provide clear, objective criteria for every major transition in ACL rehab — from early plyometrics to return-to-practice — so your decisions are structured, confident, and defensible.
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ACLR rehab changes meaningfully based on graft selection and additional procedures like meniscus repair.
You’ll learn how graft type impacts healing timelines, loading considerations, and progression speed — and how to adapt rehab without overprotecting or rushing.
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It can be difficult to know when a patient is ready to move from traditional rehab to higher-level performance work.
We break down sprint progressions, energy system development, plyometric sequencing, and change-of-direction patterns so you can confidently guide athletes into true return-to-sport conditioning.
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Fear of re-injury, self-doubt, and lingering motor patterns often limit recovery more than strength alone.
This course provides practical strategies to address psychological readiness, retrain inefficient movement compensations, and know when a referral to mental health support is indicated.
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You want to use objective data — but knowing what to test, when, and how often can feel unclear.
We break down isometric and isokinetic strength testing, force plate metrics, change-of-direction assessments, and aerobic capacity measures so you can run a repeatable, meaningful testing process throughout rehab.