Knee Pain Without Injury — What Is Actually Happening Inside Your Joint

Most people expect knee problems to begin with an injury — a twist on the cricket ground, a fall, a collision on the football pitch. But a large proportion of the patients who come to Pure Ortho Hospitals, Sainikpuri with significant knee pain have no specific injury to point to. The pain simply started. At first gradually, then more insistently. Stairs became difficult. Sitting for long periods became uncomfortable. Getting up in the morning took time.
The absence of a specific injury does not mean nothing happened. It means whatever happened, happened slowly — over months and years, quietly inside the joint, until it crossed the threshold of noticeable pain. Understanding what that gradual process is, and what structure is causing the pain, is what a proper orthopaedic evaluation at Pure Ortho Hospitals, Sainikpuri, Hyderabad determines.
What Could Be Happening Inside the Knee
The knee is one of the most mechanically complex joints in the body. It is a hinge that also allows some rotation. It supports the full weight of the body. It absorbs impact. Inside it, multiple structures can be the source of pain — and identifying which one is responsible changes the entire treatment approach.
Early Knee Osteoarthritis
The most common cause of knee pain in adults over 40. Cartilage — the smooth covering on the ends of the bones — gradually wears down. As it thins, bone rubs on bone with less cushioning. Inflammation develops. Pain, stiffness, and swelling follow. It builds over years and is often well-established by the time it becomes symptomatic enough to seek help.
Meniscus Degeneration
The two menisci are C-shaped cartilage pads that sit between the thighbone and shinbone and act as shock absorbers. With age, they degenerate — becoming less resilient and more prone to small tears under normal daily loads. Degenerative meniscus tears cause specific patterns of knee pain, often on the inner side, with swelling and clicking.
Patellofemoral Syndrome (Kneecap Problems)
The kneecap (patella) glides in a groove at the front of the knee. When it tracks incorrectly — due to muscle imbalances, tight iliotibial band, or cartilage wear under the kneecap — it causes pain at the front of the knee. Classic presentation: pain going up and down stairs, after sitting for long periods, and when squatting.
Chondromalacia Patellae
Softening and breakdown of the cartilage on the underside of the kneecap. Very common in younger adults and women. Produces a grinding sensation, front knee pain, and discomfort with prolonged sitting. Often related to quadriceps weakness and kneecap tracking problems.
Pes Anserine Bursitis
Inflammation of a small fluid sac (bursa) on the inner side of the knee, just below the joint. Common in overweight patients and those with knee arthritis. Causes specific inner knee pain and tenderness — often mistaken for arthritis alone.
Iliotibial Band Syndrome
The iliotibial band runs along the outer thigh to the outer knee. When tight, it rubs against the outer femoral condyle — causing outer knee pain. Common in runners and cyclists but also in sedentary adults with tight hip structures.
Baker's Cyst
A fluid-filled swelling at the back of the knee — the result of excess joint fluid being pushed into a small pouch behind the knee. Usually secondary to arthritis or meniscus problems. Causes a sense of fullness or aching behind the knee, sometimes extending down the calf.
Referred Pain from the Hip or Spine
Not all knee pain originates in the knee. Hip arthritis frequently refers pain to the inner knee and thigh. L3-L4 disc problems in the spine can refer pain to the front of the knee. These are commonly missed because the knee itself looks normal on imaging.
Where in the Knee Is the Pain? — Location Matters
The location of knee pain is one of the most informative clinical clues available. Different structures occupy different parts of the joint, and pain that is well-localised usually points toward a specific cause.
Medial Knee Pain
Most commonly medial compartment arthritis, medial meniscus tear or degeneration, or pes anserine bursitis. Inner knee pain is the most common presentation of early knee arthritis.
Lateral Knee Pain
Iliotibial band syndrome, lateral meniscus involvement, lateral compartment arthritis. Outer knee pain in runners or cyclists strongly suggests IT band problems.
Anterior Knee Pain
Patellofemoral syndrome, chondromalacia patellae, patellar tendinitis. Pain at the front that is worse on stairs and after sitting is a classic patellofemoral pattern.
Posterior Knee Pain
Baker's cyst, posterior meniscus involvement. A firm or soft swelling behind the knee alongside posterior pain often indicates a Baker's cyst secondary to another intra-articular problem.
Symptoms — How Non-Injury Knee Problems Present
Morning Stiffness
Knee that takes 15-30 minutes to loosen after waking — a hallmark of early arthritis
Pain on Stairs
Going up or down stairs more painful than flat walking — patellofemoral or medial compartment involvement
Pain After Sitting
Knee stiff and painful when rising after prolonged sitting — classic patellofemoral pattern
Swelling That Comes and Goes
Recurrent swelling after activity without injury — indicates joint inflammation or meniscus involvement
Clicking or Grinding
Crepitus — a grinding or clicking sensation — from worn cartilage surfaces or patella tracking problems
Giving Way
Knee momentarily gives way without warning — may indicate ligament laxity, meniscus involvement, or significant cartilage loss
Understanding Knee Arthritis Grades
Knee osteoarthritis is graded on X-ray from Grade 1 to Grade 4. Understanding the grades helps patients know where in the disease spectrum they are — and what treatment options are available at each stage.
Early Changes
Slight narrowing, minor bone changes. Managed with physiotherapy and lifestyle modification.
Mild Arthritis
Visible narrowing, small bone spurs. Injections, physiotherapy, weight management.
Moderate Arthritis
Significant narrowing, larger bone spurs, cartilage damage evident. Injections, possible arthroscopy.
Severe Arthritis
Bone-on-bone contact. Severe symptoms. Knee replacement typically the appropriate solution.
The grade alone does not determine treatment. Symptoms, age, activity level, and response to conservative management all factor in. A Grade 3 patient who manages well with physiotherapy and injections does not automatically need a knee replacement. A Grade 2 patient with severely limiting symptoms may need more aggressive management than their X-ray suggests.

How Non-Injury Knee Pain Is Diagnosed at Pure Ortho Hospitals
Diagnostic process
- Clinical history — pain location, duration, what makes it better or worse, functional limitations
- Physical examination — specific tests for each structure: McMurray test for meniscus, patellar grind test, joint line tenderness, range of motion, stability assessment
- X-ray — standing X-ray most important for arthritis grading; shows joint space, bone spurs, alignment
- MRI — detailed assessment of cartilage, menisci, ligaments, bone changes; more sensitive than X-ray for early disease
- Ultrasound — for bursitis, Baker's cyst, and guided injection planning
- Hip and spine assessment — to rule out referred pain when knee imaging is normal
Treatment — What Pure Ortho Hospitals Offers Across All Grades
Treatment options matched to your specific knee condition
- Physiotherapy — quadriceps strengthening, range of motion, gait correction, IT band stretching
- Activity modification and weight management — reducing joint load has a measurable effect on arthritis progression
- Corticosteroid injection — anti-inflammatory injection for acute flares, particularly in Grade 2-3 arthritis
- Hyaluronic acid injection (viscosupplementation) — lubricates the joint; useful in moderate arthritis
- PRP injection — for cartilage preservation in younger patients with early to moderate arthritis
- Arthroscopy — for meniscus tears, loose bodies, and cartilage debridement in selected cases
- Partial knee replacement — for single-compartment arthritis preserving the healthy parts of the knee
- Total knee replacement (conventional or robotic) — for Grade 4 disease with significantly limiting symptoms
See a Specialist If Your Knee Pain
- Has been present for more than 4-6 weeks without improvement
- Is affecting your ability to climb stairs or walk normal distances
- Is causing significant morning stiffness lasting more than 30 minutes
- Is associated with swelling that keeps returning
- Is worsening progressively despite rest and basic management
- Causes the knee to give way unexpectedly
Early evaluation at Pure Ortho Hospitals, Sainikpuri gives you more treatment options and better outcomes. Call 8686868208
Meet the Specialists at Pure Ortho Hospitals
Dr. G. Uday Sekhar Reddy
MBBS, MS Ortho, MCh Ortho
Dr. V.S. Abhilash Kumar S
MBBS, MS Ortho, FIJR, FISS (S.Korea, USA) — Clinical Director
Dr. Pudari Manoj Kumar
MBBS, MS Ortho, FIJR, FIRJR
Dr. Sai Karthikeya Badri
MBBS, D. Ortho, DNB
Dr. L. Sreeram
MPT (Ortho), FDOR, MIAP
Dr. Kranthi Kumar Reddy
MBBS, MD, C.Diab
Frequently Asked Questions
Other Departments at Pure Ortho Hospitals
Knee Pain Without Injury Still Needs a Diagnosis
The absence of a specific injury does not mean the pain will go away on its own. Visit Pure Ortho Hospitals, Sainikpuri, Hyderabad to find out exactly what is causing your knee pain — and what the right treatment is for your stage.
Call 8686868208More from Pure Ortho Hospitals
This article is for patient education only. Please consult a qualified orthopaedic surgeon before making any treatment decisions.
