“Labor Omnia Vincit” McKay Law​

Moore, OK Knee Injury Lawyer

Knee injuries can severely limit your mobility and quality of life in Moore, OK. McKay Law fights for knee injury victims throughout OK. We handle cases involving ACL, MCL, PCL, and LCL ligament tears, meniscus tears, dislocations, patella (kneecap) fractures, tibial plateau fractures, cartilage damage, and tendon ruptures. These injuries typically result from vehicle wrecks, falls, and high-impact incidents. “Dashboard knee” injuries are a major cause of knee trauma. Medical treatment can require extensive intervention—including ACL reconstruction, meniscus repair, total or partial knee replacement, arthroscopic surgery, and months of physical therapy. Long-term consequences are common ongoing medical needs and lasting impact. Many victims can’t return to their previous occupations—making vocational evaluation essential. Insurance companies often try to minimize knee injury claims—arguing the injury existed before the accident. We push back with hard evidence. We partner with medical experts and treating physicians to demonstrate the lifetime cost of your injury. We recover all available damages including medical bills, future surgeries, knee replacement revisions, physical therapy, lost wages, lost earning capacity, pain and suffering, and loss of enjoyment of life. Future knee replacement revisions are common—and these costs significantly increase your damages. All knee trauma claims is handled on a no-win, no-fee basis—you pay nothing unless we win. Don’t settle before you know the full extent of your future treatment needs. Reach out to McKay Law right away for a complimentary evaluation with a Moore, OK orthopedic injury attorney who will fight for the full recovery you deserve.

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Knee Injury Lawyer in Moore, OK | McKay Law

Knee Injury Attorney in Moore, OK | McKay Law

Understanding Knee Injury Claims

Knee injuries are some of the most life-altering injuries. The knee is a complex joint with multiple ligaments, tendons, cartilage, and bones, so damage to any part causes major impairment. Torn ACLs, meniscus tears, fractures, and dislocations frequently demand surgery and extended recovery. Even after months of recovery, knee injuries frequently leave permanent limitations. McKay Law represents knee injury victims in Moore and across the state.

Common Causes of Knee Injuries

  • Car, truck, motorcycle, and rideshare accidents
  • Dashboard injuries
  • Slip, trip, and fall accidents
  • Industrial and construction incidents
  • Recreational facility incidents
  • Equipment failures
  • Pedestrian and bicycle accidents
  • Building site incidents

Knee Injuries We Handle

  • Ligament tears:

  • Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tears

  • Torn PCL

  • MCL tears

  • Lateral collateral ligament (LCL) tears

  • Cartilage tears:

  • Meniscus tears (medial and lateral)

  • Articular cartilage damage

  • Broken bones:

  • Patella (kneecap) fractures

  • Tibial plateau injuries

  • Femur knee fractures

  • Additional knee trauma:

  • Kneecap dislocation

  • Joint dislocation

  • Patellar and quadriceps tendon ruptures

  • Bursitis

  • Post-traumatic arthritis

Signs of Knee Trauma

  • Pain in the knee area
  • Visible swelling
  • Cannot stand or walk on the leg
  • Walking difficulty
  • Reduced mobility
  • Knee feeling unstable
  • Audible or felt pops
  • Visible bruising
  • Knee getting stuck
  • Knee deformity
  • Numbness or tingling

Why Knee Injuries Matter

  • Significant disability — knee is essential for mobility
  • Most serious knee injuries require surgery
  • Extended recovery
  • Permanent impairment is common
  • Career-ending in physically demanding jobs
  • Higher risk of joint degeneration over time
  • May need knee replacement later in life
  • Function impact

Treatment for Knee Injuries

  • X-rays and imaging
  • RICE protocol (rest, ice, compression, elevation)
  • Anti-inflammatory medications
  • PT and rehabilitation
  • Cortisone shots
  • Use of knee braces
  • Use of crutches
  • Knee arthroscopy
  • ACL surgery
  • Surgical meniscus treatment
  • ORIF for severe fractures
  • Knee replacement (arthroplasty)
  • Revision surgery
  • Long-term rehabilitation

The Insurance Company Playbook

  • Arguing the injury is pre-existing
  • Prior damage arguments
  • Disputing the need for surgery
  • Equating vehicle damage with body damage
  • Defense IMEs
  • Pushing fast, lowball settlements
  • Combing through social media
  • Disputing the duration of treatment

Who Can Be Held Liable for a Knee Injury

  • Negligent drivers
  • Property owners
  • Companies in workplace injury cases
  • Makers of defective products
  • Sports or recreational facility operators
  • Doctors and hospitals

Elements of Your Claim

  • Legal Obligation — The defendant owed a legal duty.
  • Breach — The duty was breached.
  • Causation — The negligence caused your knee injury.
  • Quantifiable Losses — Economic and non-economic harm.

What Compensation Looks Like

  • Healthcare costs
  • Surgery and surgical follow-up costs
  • Total knee replacement costs
  • Rehab costs
  • Knee braces and mobility aids
  • Lost wages and diminished earning ability, particularly if you can’t return to physical labor
  • Non-economic damages
  • The toll on daily activities
  • Loss of companionship
  • Lasting disability
  • Future medical care
  • Punitive damages in cases of gross negligence

Why Knee Injuries Often Mean Permanent Damage

Despite aggressive treatment, knee injuries frequently leave lasting limitations:

  • Permanent loss of range of motion
  • Ongoing pain
  • Lasting impact on basic activities
  • May need knee replacement later
  • Post-traumatic arthritis
  • Loss of physical work capacity
  • Fall risk
  • Need for ongoing therapy

Oklahoma’s Statute of Limitations

Oklahoma generally gives 2 years from the date of the incident to file (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95).

What Working With Us Looks Like

We work closely with treating orthopedic surgeons and physical therapists to establish the long-term impact, address pre-existing condition arguments head-on, include future medical needs and permanent impairment, and prepare every case as if it will go to trial.

FAQ

Q: I have a torn ACL — how much is my case worth?

A: Significant, especially with surgery. ACL reconstruction cases carry significant value.

Q: What does it cost to hire McKay Law?

A: Nothing. No fee unless we recover.

Q: How much is a knee injury case worth?

A: Depends on severity, surgery, lost income, and permanent impact. Severity drives value — surgery and permanent damage significantly increase the case.

Q: My MRI shows a meniscus tear — what’s my case worth?

A: Depends on whether surgery is needed. Meniscus tears requiring surgery have substantial value; non-surgical tears are typically worth less.

Q: Insurance says my knee problem is from aging — are they right?

A: This is a common defense. The eggshell plaintiff rule protects victims with pre-existing conditions.

Q: Do I need knee surgery to file a claim?

A: Definitely not. Surgery isn’t required, but documented treatment is.

Q: Will I need future knee surgery or replacement?

A: Sometimes. Many serious knee injuries lead to future joint replacement.

Q: Should I give the insurance company a recorded statement?

A: Don’t. Call us first.

Q: What is the deadline to file?

A: 2 years from the date of the incident (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95). Act fast — prompt medical care strengthens claims.

Recovering Damages for Knee Trauma in Moore, OK

Knee injuries occupy a particular place in personal injury law. Knee function is essential to almost every physical activity. Knee injury affects basic mobility. And the knee’s complex structure means injuries often involve multiple components simultaneously. A local attorney experienced with knee injury claims knows how to evaluate the full scope of knee injury harm.

The Knee’s Unique Anatomy

Multiple Structures Working Together

The knee is far more complex than most people realize.

The knee involves:

The Bones
  • Upper leg bone
  • The tibia (shin bone)
  • The fibula (smaller lower leg bone)
  • Patellar bone
Cartilage
  • Menisci
  • Joint surface cartilage
Ligaments
  • Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL)
  • PCL
  • Inner side ligament
  • Outer side ligament
Tendons
  • Quadriceps tendon
  • Kneecap tendon
  • Hamstring tendons
Other Structures
  • Bursae
  • Lateral knee band
  • Articular nerves and blood vessels

Each of these structures can be injured individually.

Combined Injuries

Multi-structure knee injuries are common. The unhappy triad combines ACL, MCL, and medial meniscus damage.

Common Knee Injuries

ACL Injuries

Anterior cruciate ligament injuries are a major knee injury type. Full ACL tears require surgery.

Reconstruction procedures graft material to rebuild the ACL. Recovery is lengthy.

Meniscus Tears

Tears of the meniscal cartilage are a major knee injury type.

Treatment varies by tear type but may require arthroscopic surgery.

PCL Injuries

Posterior cruciate ligament injuries cause significant impairment, commonly resulting from car crash dashboard strikes.

MCL Injuries

MCL tears frequently heal without surgery.

LCL Injuries

Lateral collateral ligament injuries may require surgical intervention, particularly when combined with other knee injuries.

Patellar Fractures

Kneecap fractures happen with direct knee impacts. Surgical repair often needed.

Patellar Dislocation

Patellar dislocation may become recurrent.

Tibial Plateau Fractures

Tibial plateau damage are catastrophic. These fractures affect the weight-bearing surface of the tibia.

Distal Femur Fractures

Distal femur fractures at or near the knee are serious.

Articular Cartilage Damage

Damage to the cartilage covering the joint surfaces can lead to early-onset arthritis.

Tendon Injuries

Quadriceps and patellar tendon ruptures are seriously disabling.

Bursitis

Bursitis can develop after trauma.

Dislocation of the Knee

Knee dislocation requires immediate intervention. Can damage major blood vessels and nerves.

Compartment Syndrome

Swelling within muscle compartments around the knee needs urgent intervention.

Common Causes of Knee Injuries

Motor Vehicle Accidents

Vehicle accidents commonly produce knee injuries.

Vehicle-related knee injuries include:

  • Dashboard impact injuries (causing PCL and other injuries)
  • Interior impact
  • Rotational injuries
  • Crush trauma

Slip-and-Falls and Trip-and-Falls

Falls produce knee damage. Twisting falls produce specific injury patterns.

Workplace Injuries

Construction site accidents, lifting injuries, falls at work produce knee injuries.

Sports and Recreational Injuries

Athletic activities cause knee damage.

Pedestrian and Cyclist Accidents

Vehicle strikes against pedestrians and cyclists generate knee claims.

Direct Impact Injuries

Direct blows to the knee can cause specific injury patterns.

Repetitive Trauma

Cumulative trauma over time can cause knee injuries.

Treatment for Knee Injuries

Conservative Treatment

Non-surgical treatment is sometimes possible. Conservative treatment includes Initial conservative measures, pain medications and anti-inflammatories, PT, Brace use, Reduced activity.

Arthroscopic Surgery

Arthroscopy addresses many knee problems. Arthroscopic surgery handles meniscus repair or trimming, cartilage repair, ACL reconstruction (often done arthroscopically), removal of foreign bodies.

Open Surgery

Open surgical procedures for severe fractures or complex repairs.

Total Knee Replacement

For severe knee injuries causing significant arthritis can be appropriate. Often delayed in younger patients.

Partial Knee Replacement

Unicompartmental knee replacement preserves more knee structure.

Cartilage Restoration Procedures

Cartilage restoration can be appropriate for specific cartilage injuries.

Special Considerations for Knee Injuries

Future Surgery Risk

Knee injuries often lead to additional surgery. Initial conservative treatment that fails leads to surgical intervention. Surgery that doesn’t fully heal may need revision.

Long-Term Arthritis Risk

Long-term arthritis risk is real. Even injuries that appear to heal well can result in arthritis years later.

Activity Modification Required

Long-term activity modification is typical. Running, jumping, contact sports, heavy lifting may need permanent modification.

Career Impact

Career impacts are common for active work.

Damages in Knee Injury Cases

Knee injury damages can be substantial include:

  • Initial medical costs
  • Surgical costs (often substantial)
  • Inpatient care
  • Physical therapy and rehabilitation
  • Continuing care
  • Future surgery (often anticipated)
  • Additional surgical costs
  • Eventual knee replacement
  • Lost wages
  • Diminished earning capacity
  • Non-economic damages
  • Loss of consortium

Common Insurance Defenses

“Pre-Existing Conditions”

Defense argues knee findings predate the accident. Imaging often shows degenerative changes in adults’ knees, creating fertile ground for pre-existing arguments. The aggravation rule applies.

“Surgery Wasn’t Necessary”

Surgical necessity challenges.

“The Injury Resolved”

Defense argues the injury healed completely. This defense fails when future surgery is anticipated.

“Comparative Fault”

Comparative negligence.

“Improper Treatment”

“You didn’t get proper treatment”.

Critical Steps After a Knee Injury

Get Immediate Medical Attention

Same-day medical evaluation. Even mild knee pain warrant evaluation.

Get Imaging Studies

First imaging, then advanced imaging. Imaging is essential for diagnosis and case-building.

Follow Through With Recommended Treatment

Consistent treatment strengthens the case.

Document Functional Impact

Record real-world impact.

Track Surgical Recovery

For surgical cases, document the full recovery process.

Don’t Sign Releases Without Counsel

Future impact may not be clear initially. Early settlement is rarely in your interest.

Attorney Costs

Lawyers handling these cases charge no upfront fees. Expert costs run high reimbursed from the recovery.

Move Quickly

Early attorney engagement matters.

Documenting injuries through the treatment and recovery process provides better evidence. OK’s statute of limitations applies regardless.

Getting an attorney involved promptly positions the case for the substantial recovery knee injuries often warrant.

McKay Law Is Your Moore Advocate After A Knee Injury

The knee is one of the most complex joints in the body — and one of the most susceptible to injury when something goes wrong. Torn ACLs, MCL and PCL injuries, meniscus tears, patellar fractures, dislocations, and full ligament ruptures often emerge from car crashes when the dashboard crashes into the knee, slip-and-falls on hard surfaces, workplace incidents, pedestrian strikes, and sports accidents at poorly maintained facilities. The damage is immediate: a knee that fails when you stand, swells overnight, locks up at random, or simply refuses to bear weight. The recovery, on the other hand, is drawn-out — months of physical therapy, surgical reconstruction with hardware that stays in your body, repeated procedures when initial repairs come up short, and a long-term risk of arthritis that can burden a victim for decades. At McKay Law, we take on knee injury cases by consulting orthopedic surgeons, sports medicine specialists, and physical therapists who can establish the true depth of the damage and what the long term really holds.

Insurance carriers tend to reduce knee claims by leaning on pre-existing wear or arguing the injury would have healed on its own — even when the trauma drastically shifted the joint’s stability and function. When you partner with the McKay Law family, we won’t allow those tactics and develop a case that shows what the injury has truly cost you. We pursue the highest possible compensation for diagnostic imaging, surgery and reconstructive procedures, surgical hardware, hospitalization, ongoing physical therapy, mobility aids, prescription medications, future medical care including potential additional surgeries and joint replacement, lost income, loss of livelihood for clients in physically demanding jobs, the loss of athletic and recreational activities you used to love, and the relentless suffering and impairment a knee injury imposes. Call us without waiting at (866) 679-9651 or reach out online to schedule your free consultation and put a firm that considers knee injuries as seriously as you do in your corner.

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