Your knees are the largest joints in your body and the most commonly injured. They appear to only bend and straighten, but their mechanics are more complex than that — your knee rotates, translates, slides, and rolls every time you take a step. That complexity is why knee injuries are often misdiagnosed, and why the right surgeon makes a difference.
Dr. Steven Chudik is a board-certified, fellowship-trained orthopaedic surgeon and a pioneer in arthroscopic knee surgery. He has developed multiple knee techniques currently in use by surgeons worldwide, including a growth-plate-sparing pediatric ACL reconstruction and a tunnelless approach to revision ACL reconstruction. He holds eight orthopaedic patents and performs over 500 procedures annually.
Common Knee Problems
Dr. Chudik treats the full range of knee conditions. The most common problems fall into a few clinical categories.
Arthritis and Joint Surface Conditions
Ligament Injuries
- Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) Injury
- Pediatric ACL Injury
- Failed ACL Reconstruction
- Posterior Cruciate Ligament (PCL) Injury
- Medial Collateral Ligament (MCL) Injury
- Posterolateral Corner Injury
- Multiple Knee Ligament Injury
Meniscus, Cartilage, and Joint Surface Injuries
Tendon Injuries
- Patellar Tendon Rupture
- Quadriceps Tendon Rupture
- Distal Hamstring Rupture
- Patellar Tendinosis
- Quadriceps Tendinosis
- Iliotibial Band Syndrome
Fractures and Traumatic Injuries
- Patella Fracture
- Tibial Plateau Fracture
- Distal Femur Fracture
- Tibial Eminence Fracture
- Tibial Tubercle Avulsion
- Stress Fracture About the Knee
Joint Dislocations and Instability
- Patella (Kneecap) Dislocation
- Knee (Tibiofemoral) Dislocation
- Proximal Tibiofibular Dislocation
Other Knee Disorders
- Avascular Necrosis
- Osgood-Schlatter Disease
- Sinding-Larsen-Johansson Syndrome
- Bipartite Patella
- Infrapatellar Fat Pad Syndrome (Hoffa’s Disease)
- Patellofemoral Pain
- Plica Syndrome
- Bursitis (Prepatellar, Pes Anserine, Iliotibial)
See all knee conditions Dr. Chudik treats →
Common Knee Treatments and Procedures
Treatment plans are individualized. Many knee conditions respond to non-surgical care — physical therapy, activity modification, injections, bracing. When surgery is indicated, Dr. Chudik uses arthroscopic techniques whenever the clinical situation allows.
Featured procedures include:
- Total Knee Arthroplasty (Joint Replacement)
- Unicompartmental Knee Arthroplasty — Robot-Assisted (MAKOplasty®)
- Arthroscopic Anatomic ACL Reconstruction
- ACL Reconstruction with Meniscus Repair
- Arthroscopic Pediatric Growth-Plate-Sparing ACL Reconstruction — developed by Dr. Chudik
- Arthroscopic Revision ACL Reconstruction — developed by Dr. Chudik
- Tunnelless Posterior Cruciate Ligament (PCL) Reconstruction
- Arthroscopic Medial Patellofemoral Ligament (MPFL) Tunnelless Reconstruction
- Anterolateral Ligament (ALL) Reconstruction
- Arthroscopic Meniscus Repair
- Arthroscopic Meniscus Transplant
- Arthroscopic Cartilage Repair and Transplant
- Minimal Incision Quadriceps Tendon Repair
- Revision Knee Surgery
See all knee procedures Dr. Chudik performs →
Arthroscopic Knee Surgery
Arthroscopy is a minimally invasive surgical approach performed through small incisions using a miniature camera and specialized instruments to diagnose and treat injuries inside the joint. Dr. Chudik has developed multiple arthroscopic knee techniques, instruments, and implants to address limitations he encountered in existing approaches — including a tunnelless ACL reconstruction that preserves bone stock for future revisions and a growth-plate-sparing procedure that allows ACL reconstruction in skeletally immature patients.
Compared to open surgery, arthroscopy reduces disruption to surrounding soft tissues, minimizes post-operative pain and scarring, and supports faster return to function. Not every knee injury is best treated arthroscopically. Some fractures and complex reconstructions require open or combined approaches, and surgical candidacy is determined after thorough clinical evaluation.
When Surgery Is Recommended
Surgery is not the first option for most knee problems. Decisions are made after reviewing clinical history, physical examination, diagnostic imaging, response to conservative treatment, and functional goals. Physical therapy, activity modification, bracing, injections, and anti-inflammatory medication are appropriate starting points for many conditions.
Timely evaluation matters. If knee symptoms — pain, swelling, stiffness, instability, locking, or inability to bear weight — persist for more than a week or worsen despite rest and conservative care, an evaluation is warranted. Delayed diagnosis is a common reason small meniscus tears become larger, ligament injuries destabilize the joint, and cartilage damage progresses to arthritis.
Why Patients Choose Dr. Chudik for Knee Care
Dr. Chudik has performed arthroscopic knee surgery for more than twenty years, with a clinical focus on ligament reconstruction, meniscal preservation, cartilage restoration, and revision procedures. He has developed surgical techniques now used by other surgeons internationally, including his growth-plate-sparing pediatric ACL reconstruction and his tunnelless revision ACL approach. He is a US News & World Report Top Doctor in orthopaedics.
Clinically, that track record translates to experience with the cases general orthopaedic practices refer out: pediatric ligament injuries, failed prior ACL reconstructions, multi-ligament knee dislocations, complex cartilage defects, and revision knee replacement.
Knee Care in the Chicago Area
Dr. Chudik sees patients at four offices across the western Chicago suburbs: Westmont, Western Springs, Hinsdale, and Downers Grove. The Westmont office houses the Sports Medicine Injury Clinic with on-site high-field MRI and X-ray imaging, so in many cases diagnostic studies can be completed the same day as your consultation.
Request a Knee Evaluation
If knee pain, instability, or loss of function is interfering with your life, schedule an evaluation. Call 630-324-0402 or request an appointment online. For work-related knee injuries, ask for the workers’ compensation coordinator.
