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Patellofemoral Osteoarthritis

Patellofemoral osteoarthritis is arthritis that affects the joint between the kneecap and the groove at the front of the thigh bone. In simple words, it is wear and degeneration involving the underside of the patella and the trochlear groove where the kneecap moves during bending and straightening.[1] In my practice, I often explain to Bangladeshi patients that this problem usually causes pain in the front of the knee rather than deep pain on the inside or outside of the knee.

This condition can make daily activities surprisingly difficult. Many patients feel more pain while going up or down stairs, rising from a chair, kneeling, squatting, or sitting for a long time with the knee bent.[1][2] In Dhaka and other parts of Bangladesh, this matters a lot because many patients regularly use stairs, sit in crowded transport with bent knees, pray in kneeling positions, or continue household and work duties that repeatedly load the front of the knee.

What Happens in Patellofemoral Osteoarthritis

The kneecap normally glides inside the trochlear groove with the help of smooth articular cartilage. This cartilage acts like a protective low-friction surface.[1] In patellofemoral osteoarthritis, that cartilage gradually becomes worn, frayed, and inflamed. In more advanced disease, the joint space narrows, bone spurs can form, and movement of the kneecap over the femur becomes painful.[1][3]

One important point I want Bangladeshi patients to understand is that arthritis does not always begin as a severe deformity. It often starts as activity-related pain, stiffness, crepitus, and discomfort during movements that place load on the kneecap.

Common Symptoms

The main symptom is pain in the front of the knee, often behind or around the kneecap.[1] Patients may also notice:

  • pain while climbing or descending stairs
  • discomfort after prolonged sitting with the knee bent
  • pain during squatting, kneeling, or rising from a chair
  • grinding, crackling, or crepitus
  • swelling or stiffness
  • reduced walking tolerance
  • occasional feeling of weakness or buckling[1][2][3]

AAOS notes that patellofemoral arthritis commonly makes kneeling, squatting, and stair activity difficult.[1] General knee osteoarthritis can also cause clicking, snapping, grinding, stiffness, swelling, and reduced movement.[3]

Why It Happens

Patellofemoral osteoarthritis is not caused by only aging. In many patients, there are underlying mechanical or structural reasons that increase stress on the kneecap joint.

Maltracking and Dysplasia

If the kneecap does not fit or move properly in the trochlear groove, the cartilage experiences abnormal pressure over time.[1] AAOS explains that dysplasia and poor patellar fit in the groove increase stress and gradually wear the cartilage down.[1]

Previous Instability or Dislocation

A history of kneecap instability, subluxation, or dislocation can damage cartilage and change the way load passes through the front of the knee.[4] Over time, that can contribute to patellofemoral arthritis.

Previous Fracture or Trauma

Patellar fractures may heal, but the smooth joint surface may no longer be normal. AAOS notes that this can lead to friction and later arthritis in the patellofemoral compartment.[1]

General Osteoarthritis Risk Factors

MedlinePlus notes that osteoarthritis risk increases with age, excess body weight, prior injuries, and repeated joint loading.[2] Activities or occupations involving repeated kneeling, squatting, climbing, or heavy joint stress may also contribute.[2]

In Bangladesh, these everyday load factors are often important. I see many patients who have to continue physically demanding work long after symptoms begin.

How Patellofemoral Osteoarthritis Differs From Other Knee Problems

Not every front-of-knee pain is arthritis. Some patients with pain around the kneecap actually have:

  • patellar maltracking
  • patellofemoral pain syndrome
  • plica irritation
  • meniscus-related symptoms
  • tendon-related pain
  • inflammatory arthritis

That is why careful diagnosis matters. Patellofemoral osteoarthritis becomes more likely when symptoms are chronic, load-related, associated with stiffness or crepitus, and supported by examination and imaging findings.[1][3]

How I Evaluate This Problem

When I assess a patient with suspected patellofemoral osteoarthritis, I try to understand both the symptoms and the mechanics.

History

I ask:

  • where exactly the pain is felt
  • whether stairs worsen the pain
  • whether there is prolonged-sitting pain
  • whether there is crepitus, stiffness, or swelling
  • whether there was any previous kneecap dislocation, fracture, or major knee injury
  • whether the symptoms are affecting daily function and work

Physical Examination

Clinical examination usually includes checking:

  • tenderness around the kneecap
  • swelling or joint fluid
  • knee range of motion
  • patellar alignment and tracking
  • crepitus during movement
  • gait pattern
  • muscle weakness around the thigh and hip[1][3]

Imaging

X-rays are often very useful because they may show narrowing of the patellofemoral joint space, bone spurs, or alignment problems.[1] In selected patients, MRI can help if the diagnosis is unclear or if I need better assessment of cartilage, other compartments of the knee, or associated soft-tissue problems.

Non-Surgical Treatment

Many patients improve without surgery, especially when the condition is recognized early and treated systematically.

Activity Modification

Joint Care by Dr. Md. Iftekharul Alam

I usually explain to my patients that they do not need complete rest, but they do need smarter load management. During symptom flares, it often helps to reduce:

  • repeated stair climbing
  • deep squatting
  • kneeling for long periods
  • high-impact exercise
  • sitting too long without changing knee position

This kind of advice is especially practical in Dhaka, where long sitting during traffic or repeated staircase use can easily aggravate front-of-knee pain.

Physiotherapy and Strengthening

Rehabilitation is often a key part of treatment. Stronger thigh and hip muscles can improve knee mechanics and reduce patellofemoral stress. If there is associated maltracking or poor control around the knee, a structured exercise program can be very helpful.

In my practice, I often see patients improve when therapy focuses on:

  • quadriceps strengthening
  • hip strengthening
  • flexibility work
  • gait and movement correction
  • gradual return to tolerated activity

Weight Management

If a patient is overweight, even modest weight reduction can help lower joint load. MedlinePlus identifies excess weight as an important osteoarthritis risk factor.[2]

Medicines and Symptom Relief

Depending on the patient, short-term pain relief strategies, anti-inflammatory medicines when appropriate, ice during flares, and pacing of activities may be used. The goal is not only to reduce pain temporarily but to support function while longer-term strategies take effect.

Bracing, Taping, and Supportive Measures

Some patients may benefit from patellar support, taping, or supportive physiotherapy techniques, especially when the arthritis overlaps with maltracking or front-of-knee overload. These are supportive measures rather than a complete cure.

When Surgery May Be Considered

Surgery is considered when symptoms remain significant despite well-structured conservative care, or when there is clear structural disease affecting quality of life.

Realignment and Joint-Preserving Options

AAOS describes procedures such as soft-tissue realignment or tibial tuberosity transfer in selected patients to improve kneecap tracking and reduce pressure on the damaged area.[1] These options depend heavily on the underlying anatomy and where the arthritis is concentrated.

Cartilage Procedures

In carefully selected younger patients with smaller focal cartilage damage, cartilage grafting procedures may be discussed.[1] These are not suitable for every patient with arthritis and require proper selection.

Patellofemoral Replacement

If arthritis is isolated mainly to the patellofemoral compartment, patellofemoral replacement may be an option. AAOS explains that this is a partial knee replacement that resurfaces the underside of the kneecap and the trochlear groove.[1]

Total Knee Replacement

If arthritis also involves the other compartments of the knee, then total knee replacement may be more appropriate than isolated patellofemoral replacement.[1]

This is an important decision point. I usually explain to my patients that the correct operation depends not just on pain severity, but on exactly where the arthritis is located and how the rest of the knee looks on examination and imaging.

Daily Life Advice for Bangladeshi Patients

Patients often ask me what practical changes help in everyday life. My general advice depends on severity, but common useful steps include:

  • avoid repeated deep squatting during painful phases
  • use stairs thoughtfully and hold rail support if needed
  • break up long sitting periods
  • choose low-impact exercise when the knee is irritated
  • avoid forcing through sharp front-of-knee pain
  • continue rehabilitation consistently instead of only during bad flares

These simple strategies can make a real difference for patients managing work, family responsibilities, prayer movements, and city travel.

When You Should Seek Earlier Medical Review

Please seek proper assessment sooner if:

  • the pain is getting steadily worse
  • stairs have become very difficult
  • the knee swells repeatedly
  • the kneecap feels unstable
  • you are losing motion
  • pain is disturbing sleep or limiting work
  • there is a history of fracture, dislocation, or major trauma

Front-of-knee pain is common, but persistent symptoms deserve proper diagnosis because the treatment for patellofemoral arthritis is different from the treatment for a pure meniscus tear, instability problem, or inflammatory arthritis.

My Closing Perspective

In my practice, I often see people assume that all knee arthritis is the same. It is not. Patellofemoral osteoarthritis is a specific front-of-knee joint problem with its own symptom pattern, causes, and treatment decisions. If the main pain is around or behind the kneecap and worsens with stairs, sitting, squatting, or kneeling, this diagnosis should be considered carefully.[1][4]

Many patients can improve with proper non-surgical care, especially when the mechanical contributors are recognized early. And for patients with advanced disease, carefully selected surgical options can provide meaningful relief. The key is a correct diagnosis, not guesswork.

References

  1. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons. Patellofemoral Arthritis. OrthoInfo. Available at: https://orthoinfo.aaos.org/en/diseases–conditions/patellofemoral-arthritis/
  2. MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia. Osteoarthritis. Available at: https://medlineplus.gov/ency/article/000423.htm
  3. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons. Arthritis of the Knee. OrthoInfo. Available at: https://orthoinfo.aaos.org/en/diseases–conditions/arthritis-of-the-knee/
  4. StatPearls. Patellofemoral Arthritis. Available at: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/books/n/statpearls/article-26732/

Related Topics

FAQs BY PATIENTS

The most common symptom is pain at the front of the knee, usually around or behind the kneecap. It often becomes worse during stairs, kneeling, squatting, or prolonged sitting with the knee bent.[1][4]

Not exactly. It is a specific pattern of arthritis affecting the kneecap joint and the trochlear groove. Some patients have isolated patellofemoral arthritis, while others also have arthritis in other parts of the knee.[1][3]

Yes. Poor kneecap tracking and abnormal alignment can increase pressure on the patellofemoral cartilage over time and contribute to degeneration.[1][4]

No. Many patients improve with activity modification, rehabilitation, weight management, and symptom control. Surgery is usually considered when symptoms remain significant despite proper conservative treatment or when structural disease is advanced.[1]

It may be considered when arthritis is mainly limited to the patellofemoral compartment and the rest of the knee is relatively preserved. If arthritis is more widespread, total knee replacement may be more appropriate.[1]

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