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How Poor Footwear Causes Knee Pain According to a Surgeon

In my practice, I often see Bangladeshi patients who keep treating knee pain as if it started only inside the knee. In reality, the problem may begin lower down, at the foot and ankle. Footwear can change how the body absorbs shock, how the foot rolls during walking, and how force travels up to the knee. That does not mean shoes are the only cause of knee pain, but they can clearly worsen it, prolong it, or make recovery slower.

This matters in Dhaka and across Bangladesh because many people walk long distances, stand for work, use hard road surfaces daily, and wear shoes or sandals that are chosen for convenience rather than support. A small mechanical problem can become a repeated stress problem over time.

How footwear can affect the knee

The foot, ankle, knee, hip, and lower back work as one chain. When the shoe is too flat, too worn out, too loose, or too unstable, the foot may not land in a controlled way. That can increase stress on the knee joint, the kneecap, the tendons, or the inner and outer sides of the knee.

I usually explain to patients that the knee is not just a hinge. It is a weight-bearing joint that responds to alignment, balance, muscle strength, and walking pattern. If the footwear changes that pattern, knee pain may become more noticeable.

Common ways footwear can contribute include:

  • poor shock absorption on hard walking surfaces
  • unstable heel support
  • shoes that are too tight or too loose
  • worn-out soles that no longer support the foot properly
  • poor fit in people with flat feet or high arches
  • footwear that encourages the foot to roll inward or outward too much

Knee pain patterns that may be worsened by shoes

Not every knee problem is caused by footwear. Arthritis, meniscus tears, ligament injuries, bursitis, and tendinitis can all happen for other reasons. But in some patients, the shoe choice makes the pain worse.

Footwear is more likely to matter when pain is:

  • worse after long walking or standing
  • worse in one pair of shoes and better in another
  • felt in the front of the knee
  • worse during running, jumping, or climbing stairs
  • associated with foot flattening, arch strain, or poor balance

Front knee pain is especially common when the kneecap does not track smoothly. In my practice, I often find that poor support at the foot and weak hip or thigh muscles can work together and irritate the kneecap area.

Footwear issues I commonly see in Bangladesh

Many patients in Bangladesh use footwear that is practical for everyday life but not ideal for joint support. I see this often with:

  • very flat sandals or slippers used for long walking
  • old sports shoes used well beyond their useful condition
  • shoes chosen mainly for style, not stability
  • footwear with uneven sole wear
  • shoes with very soft midsoles that feel comfortable at first but give little control
  • one pair of shoes used for office work, travel, exercise, and long standing

That last point is important. A shoe that feels acceptable for short indoor use may be a poor choice for long walks on hard roads or for exercise.

What good footwear should do

I do not tell patients that they need expensive imported shoes. Price alone is not the issue. Function is the issue.

A better shoe usually has:

  • a stable heel section
  • enough cushioning for the activity
  • a secure fit without squeezing the toes
  • a sole that is not tilted or heavily worn
  • enough support for the foot type
  • a design that does not make the ankle wobble

For some patients, especially those with flat feet, a shoe insert or arch support may help. MedlinePlus also notes that people with flat feet may benefit from special shoe inserts and arch supports. That said, not every patient needs custom orthotics. Some improve simply by switching to a more supportive, better-fitting shoe.

Flat feet, high arches, and knee pain

Foot shape matters. Flat feet may allow the foot to collapse inward more than it should, which can affect knee alignment. High arches may concentrate force in a different way and make walking less comfortable. In both situations, the knee may be exposed to abnormal load.

This is one reason I pay attention to the feet when patients come with knee pain. If the foot posture is contributing to the stress, the knee treatment plan should address that too.

Sports shoes and exercise-related knee pain

For active patients, footwear becomes even more important. Running, football, badminton, gym training, and repeated stair climbing all increase force across the knee. If the shoe is worn out or unsuitable for the activity, the joint may be overloaded.

I usually ask active patients to check:

  • whether the shoe has lost its shape
  • whether the sole is unevenly worn
  • whether the shoe still feels stable during turning or landing
  • whether the training load increased recently
  • whether the shoe was designed for the activity being done

In runners and other active people, the wrong shoe may not cause the entire problem, but it can keep the knee irritated even when rest is tried.

When footwear is not the real answer

One important point I want Bangladeshi patients to understand is this: if the knee is swollen, locked, unstable, or painful even at rest, shoes alone are not the solution.

Footwear can reduce mechanical stress, but it cannot fix:

  • meniscus tears
  • ACL or other ligament injuries
  • significant arthritis
  • infection
  • fracture
  • inflammatory joint disease

Knee Care by Dr. Md. Iftekharul Alam

That is why knee pain should be assessed in context. If the symptoms point to a structural problem, the patient needs proper evaluation rather than only changing shoes.

What I assess in clinic

When I suspect footwear may be contributing, I look at the whole pattern. I ask about walking distance, work demands, sports activity, body weight, old injuries, and whether pain changes with different shoes. I also examine foot posture, gait, knee alignment, hip strength, and tenderness around the joint.

Often the problem is mixed. A patient may have mild arthritis, weak thigh muscles, flat feet, and worn-out shoes all at once. In that situation, the best result usually comes from combining footwear correction with physiotherapy, activity modification, and targeted treatment.

Simple changes that may help

If your knee pain is mild and there are no red flags, these practical steps may help:

  • use a better-fitting, more supportive shoe
  • replace very old or unevenly worn footwear
  • avoid long walking in thin, flat, unsupportive sandals
  • choose shoes that feel stable on hard surfaces
  • reduce activities that trigger pain for a short time
  • combine footwear changes with strengthening and stretching exercises

For some people, especially those with obesity or weak muscles around the hip and thigh, footwear change alone is not enough. But it may still reduce strain and improve comfort.

When to seek urgent medical evaluation

Footwear-related pain is usually not an emergency, but knee pain needs prompt assessment if any of the following occur:

  • you cannot bear weight on the leg
  • the knee is deformed or misshapen
  • there is a large swelling after an injury
  • the knee locks or gives way
  • you have fever, redness, or warmth around the knee
  • pain is severe even at rest
  • you cannot fully bend or straighten the knee
  • there is numbness, tingling, or bluish discoloration below the knee

These features suggest something more than a shoe problem.

When footwear is only part of the story

Footwear can contribute to front-knee pain, overload, and altered lower-limb mechanics, but it is rarely the only explanation. If knee pain is associated with swelling, locking, instability, deformity, or pain at rest, I think beyond shoes and consider patellofemoral pain, osteoarthritis, meniscus pathology, ligament injury, or hip and foot mechanics.

That is why persistent knee pain should be assessed as a movement and joint problem, not only as a footwear problem.

When Footwear Is Only Part of the Problem

Shoe choice can contribute to knee symptoms, but I do not assume footwear is the whole explanation. In practice, I also look for patellofemoral pain, early arthritis, hip weakness, flat-foot mechanics, tendon overload, weight-bearing alignment, and training habits before blaming the shoe alone.

That broader evaluation is especially useful in Bangladesh, where long standing, stair climbing, walking on uneven roads, and delayed access to structured exercise programs can all contribute to persistent knee pain.

When footwear is part of the problem, and when it is not

Footwear can contribute to knee discomfort, but it is rarely the only explanation for persistent pain. I often evaluate whether the pain pattern suggests patellofemoral overload, early arthritis, altered foot mechanics, obesity-related load, or muscle weakness around the hip and knee. Shoes may aggravate symptoms, especially during long standing or uneven walking surfaces, but they do not explain every painful knee.

That is why I advise patients in Bangladesh not to spend repeatedly on footwear alone if the knee is swelling, locking, giving way, or remaining painful despite reasonable changes.

When Footwear Is Only Part of the Knee-Pain Story

Footwear can contribute to knee pain, but it is rarely the only explanation. I also think about patellofemoral pain, early osteoarthritis, flat-foot mechanics, muscle weakness, hip control, and old ligament or meniscus problems. If changing shoes does not improve the pain, the patient usually needs a broader orthopedic evaluation rather than repeated trial-and-error purchases.

When footwear is part of the problem and when it is not

Footwear can contribute to knee pain, but it is not the full explanation in every patient. I also think about patellofemoral pain, osteoarthritis, malalignment, foot mechanics, weakness, and activity pattern before blaming the shoe alone.

That matters in Bangladesh because patients often change footwear repeatedly without addressing the real source of pain. If the symptoms continue despite sensible shoe changes, the knee itself should be assessed more carefully.

When footwear is only part of the problem

Footwear can contribute to knee symptoms, but it is rarely the whole explanation when pain is severe or persistent. I also evaluate patellofemoral pain, early arthritis, hip weakness, flatfoot mechanics, alignment issues, and overload from stairs or prolonged standing, which are common in Bangladesh.
That broader view helps patients avoid blaming every knee problem on shoes alone.

References

  1. MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia: Knee pain
  2. MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia: Anterior knee pain
  3. MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia: Flat feet
  4. MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia: Foot pain

About Dr. Md. Iftekharul Alam

Dr. Md. Iftekharul Alam, MBBS (Dhaka), MS (Nitore/Pangu Hospital), F.A.C.S (USA), F.I.J.R (Kolkata), F.A.S.M (Osaka, Japan), is an Orthopedic Surgery specialist with a focus on arthroscopy and arthroplasty. He serves as Assistant Professor at the National Institute of Traumatology and Orthopedic Rehabilitation (NITOR). His clinical work includes knee and shoulder arthroscopy, hip and knee replacement, sports injuries, ACL and PCL injuries, trauma, and joint conditions.

FAQs BY PATIENTS

Persistent pain, night pain, swelling, stiffness, repeated giving way, or pain that limits walking or daily activity should be assessed rather than ignored. The more the problem affects work, stairs, prayer, or sleep, the less useful it is to keep guessing at home.

That depends on the pattern of symptoms and whether there is trauma, instability, deformity, or progressive loss of function. In Dhaka and across Bangladesh, I often advise medical evaluation first when the diagnosis is unclear so treatment is not delayed in the wrong direction.

Not always. Many patients first need a careful history and examination to decide whether imaging is necessary, and if so whether X-ray, MRI, or another test is the most useful first step.

Relative rest, ice or swelling control when appropriate, safe activity modification, and avoiding repeated strain are often helpful. I advise patients not to force painful movement or keep returning to the exact activity that is worsening the symptoms.

Urgent assessment is wise for severe swelling, inability to bear weight, a hot red joint with fever, deformity, a locked joint, or new numbness. These features can point to infection, fracture, dislocation, or major internal derangement.

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