Influence of Targeted Tibial Rotation Exercises on Knee Biomechanics and Patient-Reported Outcomes in Patellofemoral Pain Syndrome

Authors

  • Divyank Shrimali
  • Renuka Pal
  • Jafar Khan
  • KM. Annamalai
  • Deepak Lohar
  • Deepak Sharma
  • Richa Hirendra Rai

Keywords:

patellofemoral pain syndrome, tibial rotation, quadriceps strengthening, hamstring strengthening, biomechanics, randomized controlled trial

Abstract

Background: Quadriceps-dominant rehabilitation remains the mainstay for patellofemoral pain syndrome (PFPS), yet aberrant tibial rotation has been implicated in mal-tracking and residual pain.

Objective: To determine whether adding explicit tibial-rotation control to a balanced hamstring–quadriceps strengthening programme yields superior pain relief and functional gains compared with conventional strengthening alone.

Methods: This secondary analysis used data from a randomised, single-centre comparative study involving 30 adults with chronic PFPS (18–60 y). Participants were allocated to (A) hamstring-quadriceps strengthening with tibial-rotation exercises or (B) the same protocol without tibial rotation. Both groups trained 30 min·session⁻¹, five days·week⁻¹ for six weeks. Primary outcomes were pain (10-cm Visual Analogue Scale, VAS) and knee function (Kujala Anterior Knee Pain Scale). Within-group change was assessed with paired t-tests; between-group differences with independent t-tests (α = 0.05).

Results: Twenty-nine participants (A = 15; B = 14) completed follow-up. Group A demonstrated larger VAS reduction (-4.13 ± 1.02 vs -2.00 ± 1.06 cm; p < 0.001) and greater Kujala improvement (+25.3 ± 5.1 vs +20.2 ± 4.8 points; p < 0.001). Post-intervention VAS (2.47 ± 0.83 cm) and Kujala scores (85.5 ± 3.1) in Group A were significantly better than Group B (4.47 ± 0.83 cm; 78.9 ± 3.6, respectively). No adverse events occurred.

Conclusion: Integrating targeted tibial-rotation drills into conventional lower-limb strengthening produced clinically and statistically superior pain and functional outcomes in PFPS over six weeks. Addressing rotational biomechanics appears to augment traditional muscle-centric protocols and should be considered in routine rehabilitation

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Fulkerson JP. Diagnosis and treatment of patients with patellofemoral pain. Am J Sports Med. 2002;30(3):447-456.

Witvrouw E, et al. Patellofemoral pain: Consensus statement from the 3rd International Patellofemoral Pain Research Retreat. Br J Sports Med. 2014;48(6):411-414.

Powers CM. Influence of altered lower-extremity kinematics on patellofemoral dysfunction. J Orthop Sports Phys Ther. 2003;33(11):639-646.

Salsich GB, Perman WH. Tibiofemoral rotation and weight-bearing kinematics in females with and without patellofemoral pain. J Orthop Sports Phys Ther. 2007;37(12):755-763.

Lee TQ, Morris G, Csintalan RP. Influence of tibial and femoral rotation on patellofemoral contact area. J Orthop Sports Phys Ther. 2003;33(11):686-693.

Earl JE, Hoch AZ. A proximal strengthening programme improves pain and biomechanics in women with PFPS. Am J Sports Med. 2011;39(1):154-163.

Nakagawa TH, et al. Effect of additional hip strengthening in PFPS: Pilot RCT. Clin Rehabil. 2012;26(11):1051-1060.

Earl-Boehm JE, et al. Strengthening hip and core vs knee muscles for PFPS: Systematic review. J Athl Train. 2015;50(9):866-878.

Crossley KM, et al. Outcome measures for PFPS: Recommendations. Clin J Sport Med. 2004;14(4):237-245.

Sunit P, et al. EMG exploratory study of hamstring–quadriceps onset in anterior knee pain. Knee. 2011;18(5):329-332.

Draper CE, et al. Differences in patellofemoral kinematics between individuals with and without pain. Am J Sports Med. 2011;39(5):1050-1058.

Smith BE, et al. Incidence and recurrence of PFPS: Systematic review. Br J Sports Med. 2018;52(4):206-211..

Downloads

Published

2025-08-02

How to Cite

1.
Shrimali D, Pal R, Khan J, Annamalai K, Lohar D, Sharma D, Rai RH. Influence of Targeted Tibial Rotation Exercises on Knee Biomechanics and Patient-Reported Outcomes in Patellofemoral Pain Syndrome. J Neonatal Surg [Internet]. 2025Aug.2 [cited 2025Sep.18];14(21S):1640-3. Available from: https://www.jneonatalsurg.com/index.php/jns/article/view/8689

Most read articles by the same author(s)

1 2 3 4 5 6 > >>