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Condition Joint · Soft tissue

Hips and knees, working together.

The hip and knee share so much of their work that pain in one is rarely independent of the other. Treating them as a system tends to outperform treating either alone.

What it is

Mechanical hip and knee pain is common across all ages — from runners and active adults to patients with early arthritic change. Most presentations involve some combination of joint stiffness, muscular imbalance, and movement patterns that load tissues unevenly.

Common knee patterns include patellofemoral pain (around or behind the kneecap), iliotibial band irritation, and meniscal-type symptoms. Common hip patterns include gluteal tendinopathy, anterior hip impingement, and referred pain into the thigh or groin.

Common causes

Common contributors include:

  • Training errors — sudden increases in volume or intensity.
  • Hip and gluteal weakness — frequently behind knee pain.
  • Restricted ankle or hip mobility — shifts load up or down the chain.
  • Footwear and surface changes — new shoes, new terrain.
  • Pelvic and lumbar contributions — referred patterns from above.
  • Early degenerative change — common, manageable, not a verdict.

How chiropractic care may help

Care typically combines manual mobilization of the hip, knee, ankle and lumbar spine; soft-tissue therapy of the gluteal, quadriceps and surrounding muscles; and a progressive loading and movement plan that addresses the whole chain rather than the painful spot alone.

A knee that complains often points up at a hip that is not doing its share.

When to consider other care

Consult a physician or orthopedic specialist for: significant trauma, locking or giving way of the knee, severe swelling, deformity, fever with joint pain, or symptoms that fail to improve over a reasonable course of conservative care.

Related conditions

Move without compromise.

Begin care

Book a New Patient Examination — most hip and knee concerns benefit from full-chain assessment, not just spot treatment.