Bucket-handle tear

Written by Dr Sheila Strover on March 14, 2025

A bucket-handle tear is a special kind of displaced circumferential tear of the knee meniscus, where the free bit flips over like the handle of a bucket. Page updated May 2024 by Dr Sheila Strover (Clinical Editor)

locked bucket handle tear

The knee becomes 'locked' when the 'bucket-handle' suddenly flips over, trapping the condyle from moving freely.

How do 'bucket-handle' tears occur?

A twisting incident may cause the initial longitudinal tear of the meniscus.

If the tear is long, or if the initial tear is ignored and slowly lengthens, any awkward movement may cause the separated part of the meniscus to flip over and get stuck under the rounded condyle of the femur, locking the joint.

bucket-handle tear of the meniscusbucket handle

Sometimes such a bucket-handle tear can spontaneously reduce, with motion suddenly restored.

Quick links

Natural history of the 'bucket-handle'

With each episode the meniscus tear may extend and the 'handle' bit may flip over more easily.

Eventually the 'handle' may break and its free end may flap in the joint, causing periodic catching or locking. Eventually the torn bit may break off altogether, to float in the joint as a 'loose body', also causing intermittent catching or locking.

Quick links

How are bucket-handle tears managed?

A patient may find that the displaced portion flips back on its own, with immediate relief of locking - but the locking may recur, and each episode may cause the tear to extend.

A locking episode can often be temporarily resolved with a manual manipulation, but this only relieves the immediate symptoms and does not fix the underlying problem.

In most cases of bucket-handle tear, today's surgeon will generally attempt a repair procedure, but in some cases the surgeon may decide that the damage is too great and it is best to cut away the 'handle' (partial meniscectomy) rather than attempt a repair. A tricky consideration is that immediate rehabilitation is easier for the partial meniscectomy.

Peer-reviewed paper Quick links

Forum discussions

Back to top