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There is no pain or swelling, but it creeks real loud when i walk up stairs. Its only my right knee that does this. Should i be worried? I am only 28

Is my knee on its way out?? i used to be a roller skater as a teenager if that makes any difference.

Has anyone else got this same thing?

2007-03-15 06:41:23 · 7 answers · asked by Angel 6 in Health Other - Health

7 answers

Most of us have creeking knees so it is not something to worry about since you have no pain or swelling. Just mention it to your doc when you get your yearly physical exam.

2007-03-15 06:45:21 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

You might want to the doc, if it was me, I would check in with a chiropractor to see if your knee is in place, and if your hips are straight. This all works itself back to your spinal alignment, and they can fix it pretty easily with a simple manipulation. It may need a few treatments for the body to accept the new adjustment. The muscles kind of get stuck sometimes, and force things back to the way they were wrong. If you keep getting it put back in, eventually the muscles will re situate themselves around the proper placement.

2007-03-15 06:53:07 · answer #2 · answered by musicimprovedme 7 · 0 1

Its just your getting older now and you'll going to hear alot of noises coming out of your body as this process goes on. I'm 36 and it sounds like I'm making popcorn in the morning when I get out of bed.

2007-03-15 10:07:15 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I get that too.

I'm older than you but I first noticed it in my early twenties. I told my doctor about it at a check-up and it said it was *very* common and to only worry about it if it became painful.It never has.

2007-03-15 06:50:31 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

the press on your knee, and the discomfort, tells you there is rotation interior the knee joint (the bones are not articulating properly). once you pass down stairs your hip muscle tissues,larger leg muscle tissues and decrease leg muscle tissues ought to act jointly to stabilize your knee to stay away from rotation and translation of the bones...that's not happening on the 2d. that's totally fixable, very hassle-loose, yet you opt to restoration it rapidly. i opt to advise a e book referred to as "discomfort loose." i'm no longer the author, so i'm no longer attempting to sell you on something...There are workouts (distinctive than PT) which will help.

2016-09-30 23:23:29 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

probally... you should talk 2 a doctor about it.

2007-03-15 06:49:17 · answer #6 · answered by riddlemethis 5 · 0 0

...have it checked out...

2007-03-15 06:50:54 · answer #7 · answered by Pooks 6 · 0 0

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