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Retained Drain after Anterior Cruciate Ligament Surgery : A Silent Threat to an Athlete's Career: A Case Report.

Introduction: Breaking of surgical drain during the removal and retention of broken drain fragment is an avoidable complication. Such a complication brings disrepute to the operating team and causes psychological as well as further surgical trauma to the patient as a return to the operating room is required many a times to remove the retained drain fragment.

Case Report: We report a case of an undetected retained drain fragment inside the knee joint of a 24-year-old male international kabaddi player, who remained asymptomatic for 5 months, when the residual drain fragment was removed arthroscopically. No such case has been reported earlier in the literature after arthroscopic surgery.

Conclusion: Retained drain fragment after arthroscopic surgery can stay silent for months. Hence, a high index of suspicion should be maintained by surgeons to detect such a complication at the earliest. We suggest that every arthroscopic surgeon should follow a standard protocol while inserting and removing the drain to avoid this mistake.

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