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Understanding Knee Pain and its Need for Physiotherapy, Injections, Arthroscopy or Knee Replacement

Posted June 24th,2026 by Cura Hospitals

Whether you are old or young, having knee pain can easily start to disrupt your daily life. It’s not the kind of pain you can ignore, a dull ache every time you take a walk or a sharp pain when you climb stairs. 

The reassuring news is that knee pain is treatable and not every case needs surgery. 

Let’s break down the four main treatment options for knee pain and understand what each one actually does.

What Is Knee Pain and Why Does It Happen?

Movement is a big part of your life and it depends on your knee joint, making it one of the most used joints of the body. It also supports your body weight and absorbs impact. Pain occurs when the joint has been overused, experienced some form of trauma or inflamed from some internal issue.

Common causes include:

  • Osteoarthritis (age-related wear)
  • Ligament injuries
  • Meniscus tears (the cushioning tissue between bones)
  • Inflammatory conditions
  • Old Injuries 

The treatment depends on the severity and type of issue the joint is facing.

What Are the Treatment Options?

1. Physiotherapy for Knee Pain

Physiotherapy is usually the first step. It is simple with a good track record and very effective for mild to moderate knee problems. 

A physiotherapist plans a proper routine for your condition, which usually includes:

  • Exercises that will strengthen the muscles around the knee
  • Improves flexibility and range of motion of the joint
  • Posture and gait correction along with improvement in balance 
  • Daily activity modification 

Physiotherapy works well for early arthritis, sprains, and injury recovery. It is also the foundation of recovery after any knee surgery. Physiotherapy is required at every stage of treatment.

2. Pain Management Injections

The next option, usually after physiotherapy, is injections to target the pain. It is a non-surgical option and used as a bridge, providing enough relief to keep you moving while other treatments take effect or to delay surgery when the timing is not right.

Common types include:

  • Corticosteroid injections: Reduce inflammation and provide short-term pain relief that lasts for a few months.
  • Hyaluronic acid injections: They help the joint work more smoothly by lubricating it from the inside. 
  • PRP: This method uses your body’s own cells to heal the joint.

Injections are more about managing symptoms rather than the final treatment. 

3. Arthroscopy

Arthroscopy is a minor surgical procedure. A small camera called a ‘scope’ is inserted into the knee through a tiny opening, giving the surgeon a direct view of what is happening inside the joint.

It is used to diagnose and treat specific mechanical problems such as the following:

  • Meniscus tears
  • Loose bone or cartilage pieces in the joint
  • ACL and ligament injuries
  • Inflamed joint lining

Most patients go home the same day. The recovery time is much faster comparably.

4. Knee Replacement Surgery

Knee replacement is a surgical procedure where parts of the knee joint that are damaged are replaced with metal or plastic to allow the joint to function normally and ease the patient’s long-term pain. 

There are two types:

When Is Knee Replacement Necessary?

  • Arthritis has progressed to cartilage loss and there is bone-on-bone contact
  • Pain starts to limit daily activities, sleep, and quality of life
  • Other treatments have not provided adequate relief

Post-surgery, the recovery involves a hospital stay followed by weeks of intensive physiotherapy. Most patients return to their normal daily activities within three to six weeks, with continued improvement over six to twelve months.

Book a consultation at Cura Multispeciality Hospitals today to start your journey toward pain-free movement.

Comparing All Four Treatments: A Quick Reference

TreatmentBest ForBenefitsRisksEffectiveness
PhysiotherapyEarly arthritis, ligament sprains, post-injury recoveryNon-invasive, improves strength and function, no recovery downtimeRequires consistency and timeHigh for mild to moderate conditions
InjectionsModerate arthritis, temporary pain managementQuick relief, non-surgical, outpatientTemporary, repeated doses may lose effectivenessModerate work is best alongside physiotherapy
ArthroscopyMeniscus tears, loose fragments, ligament injuriesMinimally invasive, faster recovery, same-day dischargeLimited benefit for arthritis alone; may need repeat proceduresHigh for mechanical problems, low for arthritis
Knee ReplacementSevere arthritis, failed conservative treatmentsLong-lasting pain relief, restores mobilityMajor surgery and significant rehabilitation neededVery high for advanced arthritis, implants last 20 years or more

What a Knee Specialist Has to Say

Dr Leonard Buller, orthopaedic surgeon and assistant professor at Indiana University School of Medicine, has noted that deciding when to proceed with knee replacement is one of the most difficult clinical decisions in orthopaedics. As he puts it, surgery done too early carries unnecessary risk, while waiting too long compromises quality of life. The key, in his view, is open communication between doctor and patient, treating every individual as exactly that.

This principle applies equally to every stage of knee pain treatment. The right intervention at the right time, guided by your symptoms and a thorough clinical assessment, is always more effective than rushing toward surgery or avoiding it unnecessarily.

Ready to Get the Right Answer for Your Knee?

Knee pain does not have one universal solution. The right treatment depends on your age, the cause and severity of the problem, your lifestyle, and your goals.

At Cura Multispeciality Hospitals, our experienced orthopaedic doctors in Bangalore work with you to understand your condition fully before recommending any treatment. From physiotherapy programmes to advanced knee replacement surgery, we offer comprehensive knee care all in one place.

Do not let knee pain limit your life. Schedule your consultation with our orthopaedic team today.

Frequently Asked Questions

  1. How do I know if I need arthroscopic knee surgery?
    If you have a confirmed meniscus tear, loose fragments inside the joint, or a ligament injury that has not responded to physiotherapy, arthroscopy may be indicated. A clinical examination and MRI will guide the decision.
  2. Can you have knee replacement if you have neuropathy?
    It depends on the severity and type of neuropathy. Surgery is possible often, but your orthopaedic surgeon will need to assess nerve health and overall surgical risk before proceeding.
  3. Can a knee replacement be done arthroscopically?
    No. Arthroscopy and knee replacement are two separate procedures. A knee replacement involves removing and replacing joint surfaces, which cannot be done through the small incisions used in arthroscopy.
  4. Why is arthroscopy not recommended for arthritis?
    Because arthroscopy cannot regenerate cartilage. If worn cartilage is the primary problem, cleaning or trimming the joint provides only temporary or no lasting relief. Multiple clinical studies have confirmed this finding for osteoarthritis without mechanical tears.

References:

    Amulya Surakanti, Michelle Demory Beckler, and Marc M Kesselman, 2023, Surgical Versus Non-Surgical Treatments for the Knee: Which Is More Effective?, available at, https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10010196/ 

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