Knee pain is one of the most common reasons patients come to Physica Medica — and one of the most undertreated. Not because it's complicated to diagnose, but because most treatment stops at the knee itself. If your pain keeps coming back after rest, cortisone, or a previous round of PT, the knee probably isn't the whole story.
We work with the full range of knee presentations, from overuse injuries in runners to post-operative rehab following ACL reconstruction or total knee replacement. Conditions we see regularly include patellar tendonitis, IT band syndrome, patellofemoral pain syndrome, meniscus injuries, and osteoarthritis.
Post-surgical cases are a clinical focus here. Dr. Chen has specific training in ACL rehabilitation and return-to-sport progressions — not just early-stage recovery, but the full arc from initial weight-bearing through sport-specific movement. If your surgeon has cleared you for PT, we can coordinate directly with their protocol.
We also treat patients who've been told surgery is their only option and want a second opinion through conservative care first. That's a conversation worth having before committing to an OR.
The knee is a hinge joint caught between two complex systems — the hip above and the foot and ankle below. When either of those systems isn't doing its job, the knee compensates. Over time, that compensation becomes the injury.
Weak glutes and hip abductors let the femur rotate inward under load. That shifts stress onto the patella and the structures around it. Strengthening the quad without addressing the hip is why so many knee patients plateau.
Overpronation, stiff ankles, and altered foot strike patterns all change how force travels up the leg. A thorough biomechanical assessment looks at the full chain, not just the painful joint.
Two patients with identical MRIs can have completely different pain experiences based on how they squat, climb stairs, or land from a jump. Identifying and correcting the specific movement fault is what separates a short-term fix from a lasting one.
Hands-on treatment is central to what we do. Before loading a joint through exercise, the tissue around it needs to be mobile, the trigger points need to be resolved, and the nervous system needs to be calm enough to accept new movement patterns.
Yes — and it's one of the more direct applications. Patellar tendonitis involves trigger points in the quadriceps that refer pain directly to the tendon. Dry needling resets those neuromuscular trigger points, reduces the referred pain load on the tendon, and allows the quad to function more normally during loading exercises. It's not a standalone treatment, but as part of a structured plan, it accelerates recovery in a way that stretching and strengthening alone typically don't. Learn more on our dry needling service page.
→Instrument-assisted soft tissue mobilization uses calibrated metal tools to detect and treat restricted tissue around the knee — particularly useful after surgery, where scar tissue limits range of motion and alters how the joint loads. The tools allow more precise treatment than hands alone in dense or fibrotic tissue.
→Restricted patellar mobility, tight IT band, and limited posterior capsule flexibility all contribute to knee pain. Manual joint mobilization and targeted soft tissue work address these directly — before asking the joint to move through a full range under load.
→Manual therapy gets the tissue ready. Strength and movement re-education are what keep the pain from returning. Once we've identified the specific biomechanical fault driving your knee pain — whether that's hip weakness, quad dominance, poor single-leg stability, or altered landing mechanics — we build a loading program around it.
The exercise prescription is specific to your movement assessment findings, your activity goals, and where you are in the recovery timeline. For post-surgical patients, that means following evidence-based ACL or post-replacement protocols with clear return-to-sport criteria. For chronic overuse cases, it means addressing the movement fault before adding more load.
We work with runners, athletes, and active patients who can't simply take six weeks off. Part of the plan is figuring out what you can keep doing, what needs to be modified, and how to build back without re-aggravating the injury.
Physica Medica is an out-of-network provider. Sessions are one-on-one with a doctoral-level physical therapist for a full hour — no aides, no rotating staff, no 20 minutes on a machine. Most patients pay $145–$220 per session, with partial reimbursement available through out-of-network benefits depending on your plan.
If you have a PPO or a plan with out-of-network coverage, call your insurer before your first visit and ask about your out-of-network deductible and reimbursement rate for PT. We can provide a superbill after each visit to submit for reimbursement. HSA and FSA payments are accepted.
If cost is a real factor in your decision, start with a consultation call. We'll give you an honest read on what your case likely involves and whether the investment makes sense before you commit.
[ Real patient testimonial will be placed here — a knee pain or ACL rehab success story, in the patient's own words ][Patient Name] · Chronic low back pain, Canton resident
Can physical therapy help knee pain without surgery? For many conditions — patellar tendonitis, patellofemoral syndrome, IT band syndrome, mild-to-moderate meniscus irritation, and early osteoarthritis — yes, conservative PT is often effective and surgery is not the first-line recommendation. For more significant structural damage, the honest answer is that it depends on the imaging, your symptoms, and your goals. We'll tell you directly what we think conservative care can and can't accomplish in your case.
Does dry needling work on patellar tendonitis? It's one of the stronger applications. Trigger points in the quad refer directly to the patellar tendon, and dry needling addresses those points in a way that stretching and strengthening alone don't. Most patients notice a meaningful reduction in tendon pain within a few sessions when dry needling is paired with a progressive loading program.
How long does knee rehabilitation take? Overuse injuries like patellar tendonitis typically respond within 6–10 sessions over 6–8 weeks. Post-surgical rehab — ACL reconstruction in particular — follows a longer timeline, often 4–9 months depending on graft type, surgical findings, and return-to-sport goals. We give you a realistic projection at your first visit, not a vague 'it depends.'