What to do about Knee Pain?
Knee pain is incredibly common. It’s estimated that 25% of adults will experience pain in one or both knees during their lives. But children and teenagers can also suffer from knee pain. Sometimes an illness such as gout is the cause. Often, damage to the soft tissues around the joint causes pain. Many patients find it extra frustrating when they can’t identify the cause — when there was no incident or fall, just a niggling pain that keeps getting worse. Your osteopath can help identify the cause of your pain and provide treatment and advice so that you can get back to moving well.
Why not move it laterally?
The knee allows for some lateral movement. (The femur and lateral meniscus flow over the tibia during rotation.) But for stability, the cruciate ligaments (the one’s deep inside the knee) limit this lateral, rotational movement. Sudden twists and turns (as we might see in netball for example) can damage the anterior cruciate ligament and the meniscus by working them too hard, too suddenly. Indeed, ACL tears and meniscal injuries are among the most common injuries in netballers! While partial tears can heal over time, complete tears often require surgery, so attention to jumping, landing, and pivoting techniques is an essential aspect of training for sports and dance forms that involve pivoting!
How should I treat my pain?
We know what to do when there’s been an accident resulting in injury: RICER. (Rest, ice, compression, elevation, referral.) So, if you’ve had a fall, or landed badly and torn your ACL, you know what to do in the first instance… then you need to book in and see us! But what if you can’t identify the cause — what if the pain just slowly snuck up on you? You might be surprised to know that rest is not always advised. Joints need to move. Synovial fluid can only move around the joint if you keep moving through the joint’s full range of motion.
This does not mean you carry on with whatever activity you think caused the pain in the first place or continue to limp around when your physician has advised you not to. It means you keep moving the joint gently through its range of motion, perhaps without load at first and perhaps under the supervision of your osteopath or other health professional. Alongside this, it means you find a low-impact exercise to keep you healthy while you are healing. It means you gently and consistently strengthen and stretch the muscles supporting the knee: the quadriceps, hamstrings, calves, and tibialis. Your osteopath can advise you on the muscles most in need of strengthening to bring your body into balance and alignment.
When to see an Osteopath?
Knee pain can be generalised or quite specific. It can be a little annoying or totally debilitating. Knee pain can have many causes. If pain is ongoing, becoming worse or preventing you from enjoying sports and hobbies, visit our bookings page to make an appointment: https://www.myosteo.com.au/booking. The team at myOsteo can help you get to the bottom of what’s causing your pain and lend you our expertise, devising a specific regime of rehabilitative exercises for you. Through gentle manipulation, we can bring function back, allowing the body’s natural healing processes to work effectively. Massage and dry-needling may further reduce pain and improve mobility. So what are you waiting for?