ACL and Other Ligament Injuries
Ligament injuries are common in rugby, football, hockey, and change-of-direction gym training. Physiotherapy focuses on swelling control, restoring knee stability, rebuilding lower-limb strength, and guiding return-to-sport decisions after either conservative care or surgery.
Meniscus Tears
Meniscus injuries can cause joint-line pain, swelling, clicking, or a feeling that the knee catches during movement. Physiotherapists use strength work, movement retraining, and load management to reduce irritation and improve function, whether recovery is non-surgical or post-operative.
Patellofemoral Pain (Runner's Knee)
Runner's knee is common in runners, field-sport athletes, and active adults who increase training too quickly. Treatment usually targets hip and quadriceps strength, kneecap tracking, and training errors that keep overloading the front of the knee.
Knee Osteoarthritis
Osteoarthritis often causes stiffness, start-up pain, and reduced tolerance for stairs, walking, or prolonged standing. Physiotherapy helps patients stay active through strengthening, mobility work, and pacing strategies that reduce pain without complete rest.
Post-Knee-Replacement Rehabilitation
After knee replacement surgery, physiotherapy is key for regaining extension, bending range, walking confidence, and functional leg strength. Rehab is usually staged over several months so patients can move from pain control to independent daily activity and safer long-term mobility.
Iliotibial Band (ITB) Syndrome
ITB syndrome usually presents as pain on the outside of the knee, especially in runners and cyclists. Physiotherapy addresses the movement faults, hip weakness, and training load issues that keep the outside of the knee irritated.