Knee Pain Relief

Your Pathway to Knee Pain Relief

In the journey of life, knee pain can often emerge as an unwelcome companion, causing discomfort to people of various ages. From young athletes to active seniors, knee pain is a widespread issue that doesn't discriminate. It may be born out of a sudden injury, like a torn ligament or ruptured cartilage, or it could be the byproduct of a medical condition such as arthritis, gout, or even an infection.

Thankfully, minor knee pain often responds positively to strategies such as physical therapy, using knee braces, maintaining a healthy lifestyle, and can often provide significant relief. Here at PhysioFit, we understand that your journey to pain-free living is unique. We're here to provide customized, evidence-based treatments with a fitness-based approach to alleviate your knee pain effectively, helping you return to your everyday activities.

What You Should Know

Aging, injury, or recurring stress on the knee are the leading causes of knee pain.

Prevalent knee issues encompass sprains or strains in ligaments, cartilage tears, tendonitis, and arthritis.

A proper diagnosis of a knee problem involves a thorough evaluation from a professional or a medical examination, supplemented by diagnostic procedures such as MRIs, CT scans, X-rays, or arthroscopy.

Depending on the type and severity of the condition, both non-operative and surgical treatments are available to alleviate knee pain and problems.

4 of the Most Common Knee Problems

The knee, a complex and integral joint in the human body, can be prone to several issues. These complications often result from natural aging, consistent stress on the knee joint, or an injury. Let's discuss four of the most common knee problems:

Strained or Sprained Knee Ligaments and Muscles: Often the result of a sudden blow or twist to the knee, strains or sprains affect the ligaments and muscles in your knee. The typical symptoms include pain, swelling, and difficulty in walking.

Torn Cartilage: Our knees consist of menisci, which are pads of connective tissue acting as shock absorbers while providing stability. These can tear due to knee trauma, often coinciding with sprains. The usual treatment ranges from wearing a supportive brace to undergoing surgery, depending on the severity of the tear.

Tendonitis: This refers to the inflammation of tendons from overuse during activities like running, jumping, or cycling. An example is patellar tendonitis, also known as "jumper's knee." It's common among sports enthusiasts who partake in high-impact activities like basketball, where the repeated force of landing can strain the tendon.

Arthritis: Osteoarthritis, the most common type affecting the knee, is a degenerative condition where the joint cartilage wears away gradually, often affecting middle-aged and older individuals. Excessive stress on the joint, due to repeated injury or being overweight, can cause it. Another form, Rheumatoid arthritis, can cause inflammation and destruction of the knee cartilage, often affecting individuals at a younger age than osteoarthritis does.

Remember, if you resonate with any of the symptoms or conditions mentioned, we highly recommend making an appointment with us for a thorough evaluation and personalized treatment plan.

Preventing Knee Pain

While it might be impossible to completely avoid knee pain, these strategies can aid in averting injuries and slowing down joint wear:

Maintain a Balanced Weight: Keeping your weight in check is one of the most beneficial actions for your knees. Each extra pound exerts additional stress on your joints, heightening the likelihood of injuries and osteoarthritis.

Condition Yourself for Sports: To equip your muscles for the rigors of sports activities, incorporate conditioning exercises into your routine.

Aim for Perfection in Practice: Strive to perfect your technique and movement patterns for any sport or physical activity. Professional coaching can be valuable in this aspect.

Strengthen and Flex: Weak muscles often precipitate knee injuries. Strengthening your quadriceps and hamstrings, which are front and back muscles of your thighs, will help bolster your knee support. Engage in balance and stability training for more effective muscle coordination around your knees.

Remember, tight muscles can also lead to injuries, so flexibility exercises should be a regular part of your workout regime.

Exercise Wisely: If you're dealing with osteoarthritis, chronic knee pain, or frequent injuries, you may need to reconsider your exercise methods. Contemplate shifting to swimming, water aerobics, or other low-impact activities. At times, simply limiting high-impact activities can result in substantial relief.

Common Symptoms of Knee Pain

Inflammation and rigidity

A reddish hue and a warm feeling when touched

Sounds of popping or crunching

A sense of weakness or lack of stability

Difficulty in fully extending the knee

Remember, if you resonate with any of the symptoms or conditions mentioned, we highly recommend making an appointment with us for a thorough evaluation and personalized treatment plan.

Please Note: The information provided on our website is intended for general education and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Each individual's situation and body is different. Therefore, what may work for one person may not work for another. We care about your well-being and advise you to reach out to us to discuss your specific needs before implementing any advice from our website.

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Physical Therapy Bend Oregon

Maigne’s Syndrome: The Hidden Culprit Behind Chronic Back and Hip Pain—And How Physical Therapy Can Help

April 08, 20255 min read

If you’re an athlete, weightlifter, or cyclist struggling with persistent lower back, hip, or groin pain, you might be caught in an endless cycle of frustration—stretching, foam rolling, and even resting, only to have the pain return once you resume training.

What if I told you the problem isn’t in your hip flexors, glutes, or lumbar spine—but rather in a part of your back you might have never considered?

Enter Maigne’s Syndrome—a condition that stems from dysfunction at the thoracolumbar junction (T12-L2), where the upper and lower spine meet. It’s often misdiagnosed as sciatica, a hip impingement, or even a hernia, leaving many athletes and active individuals chasing ineffective treatments.

But here’s the good news: with targeted physical therapy interventions, you can fix the underlying issue and get back to training pain-free. Let’s dive in.

What is Maigne’s Syndrome?

Maigne’s Syndrome, also known as thoracolumbar junction syndrome, occurs when the nerves at T12-L2 become irritated, compressed, or dysfunctional. These nerves supply sensation to the lower back, hips, groin, and upper thigh, meaning that irritation here can refer pain downwards, often misleading both athletes and clinicians.

Unlike disc herniations or true nerve root compressions, Maigne’s Syndrome is a mechanical dysfunction—meaning that restricted movement, muscle imbalances, or poor biomechanics can be the root cause.

How Common Movements Can Trigger Maigne’s Syndrome

If you’re an athlete, certain movement patterns can overload the thoracolumbar junction, leading to irritation and pain over time. Here’s how it happens:

1. Barbell Deadlifts & Kettlebell Swings: Overloading the Hinge Pattern

  • The Issue: Heavy deadlifts and kettlebell swings require a strong hip hinge. If your thoracolumbar junction lacks mobility, your body compensates by hyperextending the lower back or overusing the lumbar erectors—stressing the nerves at T12-L2.

  • How It Presents: Pain that mimics a lumbar strain, SI joint dysfunction, or a deep hip ache.

2. Snatching & Overhead Lifts: Unstable Spinal Extension

  • The Issue: When snatching or jerking a barbell overhead, a lack of thoracic extension forces the thoracolumbar junction to compensate, causing excessive stress.

  • How It Presents: Localized low back tightness, hip tightness, or even discomfort in the groin after lifting.

3. Cycling: Repetitive Lumbar Flexion and Poor Pelvic Positioning

  • The Issue: Long hours on the bike, especially in an aggressive forward-leaning position, place the thoracolumbar junction in prolonged flexion, irritating the nerves.

  • How It Presents: A dull ache in the lower back, groin discomfort, and even hip flexor tightness that never fully resolves.

4. Sitting for Work, Then Training Hard

  • The Issue: If you spend hours sitting at a desk and then go straight into heavy training without properly mobilizing the thoracolumbar spine, the area remains stiff and prone to irritation.

  • How It Presents: Pain that worsens after long periods of sitting but also flares up after intense workouts.

How Physical Therapy Can Help: A Targeted Approach

1. Restoring Thoracolumbar Mobility

One of the biggest overlooked factors in treating Maigne’s Syndrome is improving mobility at the thoracolumbar junction itself. If this area is locked up, the lumbar spine and pelvis compensate, leading to dysfunction.

Intervention:

  • Segmental Cat-Camel: Focus on articulating movement through the T12-L2 area.

  • Foam Rolling + Mobilization: Thoracolumbar junction extensions using a foam roller to retrain spinal movement.

  • Quadruped T-Spine Rotations: Improve mobility in the mid-back, reducing compensation at T12-L2.

2. Strengthening the Deep Core for Stability

If the thoracolumbar junction is unstable, the surrounding muscles (like the QL, erectors, and psoas) become overactive, creating pain and dysfunction. The key? Strengthening the deep core while avoiding excessive spinal compensation.

Intervention:

  • Dead Bug Variations: Ensure the pelvis and ribs stay neutral, avoiding overuse of the low back.

  • Pallof Press (Half-Kneeling or Standing): Anti-rotation core work to stabilize the thoracolumbar junction.

  • Bird Dogs with Controlled Reach: Focus on maintaining neutral spine control through movement.

3. Addressing Pelvic Alignment and Hip Function

Since the nerves from T12-L2 influence the hip flexors and adductors, dysfunction at this level can create tight, overactive hip flexors and inhibited glutes—which worsens the cycle of pain.

Intervention:

  • 90/90 Hip Lift with Breathing: Helps reset pelvic position and reduce anterior pelvic tilt.

  • Side-Lying Hip Clamshells & Glute Bridges: Activate the posterior chain without lumbar compensation.

  • Copenhagen Planks: Strengthen the adductors, which can become weak due to nerve dysfunction at T12-L2.

4. Retraining Posture & Movement Patterns

If you don’t fix the way you move, the pain will keep returning.

Intervention:

  • Cueing a Neutral Rib Position During Lifts: Avoid excessive spinal extension at lockout in deadlifts, snatches, or presses.

  • Hip Hinge Patterning Drills: Teach proper mechanics so that the thoracolumbar junction isn’t compensating.

  • Ergonomic Adjustments for Cyclists: Ensure proper saddle height and posture to reduce stress on the junction.

The Bottom Line: A Smarter Approach to Fixing Your Pain

Maigne’s Syndrome is one of the most overlooked causes of chronic low back, hip, and groin pain, especially in athletes who deadlift, swing kettlebells, snatch, or cycle. If left unaddressed, it leads to frustrating compensation patterns, limiting performance and quality of life.

The good news? Physical therapy can resolve it—but only if treatment is focused on restoring thoracolumbar mobility, improving core stability, optimizing hip function, and retraining movement patterns.

If you’ve been struggling with lingering back or hip pain that never quite resolves, consider working with a physical therapist who understands Maigne’s Syndrome and its biomechanical implications. With the right approach, you can eliminate pain at its source and get back to training stronger than ever.

Maigne’s SyndromeThoracolumbar junction syndromeBack and hip painback painhip painsciaticaChronic lower back painlower back painpain control
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