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Orthopedic surgeon Dr. Sean Keyes of AdventHealth discusses the stages of rehabilitation from BEAR Implant surgery and when you can expect to return to sports. To find a surgeon who offers the BEAR Implant, visit https://miachortho.com/resources/find... For more information on the BEAR Implant, visit https://miachortho.com/healthcare-pro... If you have any questions about the BEAR Implant, please comment below or contact us at https://miachortho.com/contact-us/. Follow us on our social media channels: Facebook – / miachortho Twitter – / miachortho LinkedIn – / miachortho Instagram – / bearimplant #ACLsurgery #acltear #bearimplant #ACLrestoration @AdventHealth @floridahospital About The BEAR® Implant The Bridge-Enhanced® ACL Restoration (BEAR®) Implant is a proprietary bio-engineered implant used to facilitate healing of the torn ACL. The BEAR Implant is the first medical technology to demonstrate, with Level 1 clinical evidence, that it enables the body to heal its own torn ACL. Unlike reconstruction, which is the current standard of care, the BEAR Implant does not require a second surgical wound site to remove a healthy tendon from another part of the leg or the use of a donor tendon. The BEAR Implant acts as a bridge between the two ends of the torn ACL. The surgeon injects a small amount of the patient’s own blood into the implant and inserts it between the torn ends of the ACL in a minimally invasive procedure. The combination of the BEAR Implant and the patient’s blood enables the body to heal the torn ends of the ACL back together while maintaining the ACL’s original attachments to the femur and tibia. The BEAR Implant is resorbed by the body as the ACL heals. The BEAR Implant was granted De Novo Approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in December 2020. It is indicated for skeletally mature patients at least 14 years of age with a complete rupture of the ACL, as confirmed by MRI. Patients must have an ACL stump attached to the tibia to facilitate the restoration. Visit miachortho.com for complete product information, including Instructions for Use. About Miach Orthopaedics, Inc. Miach Orthopaedics, Inc. is a privately held company located in Westborough, Massachusetts, dedicated to developing bio-engineered surgical implants for connective tissue restoration. The company’s initial focus is the Bridge-Enhanced® ACL Restoration (BEAR®) Implant, which represents a paradigm shift in the treatment of ACL tears from reconstruction to restoration. The BEAR technology was pioneered by Martha Murray, M.D., founder of Miach Orthopaedics, at the Boston Children’s Hospital Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, with initial research funding provided by the NFL Players Association, Boston Children’s Hospital and the National Institutes of Health. ©2023 Miach Orthopaedics. All rights reserved. ML-1099 Rev A 7/2023 Sean Keyes, DO, AdventHealth: The typical return to sports time after ACL surgery is about nine months. And what we know is the earlier you go back to sports, yes, you'd be able to go back sooner, but you're at a higher risk of injury. The truth be told, the longer it takes you to recover from ACL surgery, the lower your risk of re-injury. You know, the BEAR procedure is not any different in terms of reconstruction in getting back to sports. Now the first couple weeks is a lot of pain control and restoring range of motion. And so you can break therapy up into several different sections. The first couple months is healing of your graft or your ACL while you're restoring motion. The second two months is restoring strength in the knee. And the last two months, months four to six is a lot of balance. Now in that six-month mark, we look for a lot of patients to return to normal practice, non-contact, non-impact, no high-risk sports while they're getting the psychology of their healing, getting the feels out before they go back to sports at about nine months.