What’s the Best Treatment for Patellar Tendonitis?

single leg press for patellar tendinitis

If you are currently running with patellar tendonitis, you will be all too familiar with the knee pain located just below the patella (knee cap). This tendon injury is often also referred to as “jumper’s knee”.

In this post I’ll be discussing why you may have developed jumper’s knee from running, and what patellar tendonitis exercises we as physios often give runners as part of the knee rehab process.

I’ll answer the important question: “Can I still run with patellar tendonitis?

What Causes Patellar Tendonitis?

Patellar tendonitis is a condition that affects the patellar tendon of the knee. It occurs as a result of excessive dynamic load through the tendon; often in sports like running, volleyball and basketball. Hence the name “jumper’s knee”.

Patellar Tendonitis or Tendinopathy?

If we’re being accurate, we should really define this common injury as a “tendinopathy” rather than a “tendonitis”. The suffix ‘itis’ implies that there is more of an inflammatory nature to the injury, which is normally only true of acute cases of this running knee injury.

That said, in the interest of using terms most of us runners are familiar with, I’m going to stick with patellar tendonitis for the remainder of this article.

patellar tendonitis from running knee pain

How to Treat Patellar Tendonitis

When putting together a patellar tendonitis treatment plan and jumper’s knee exercises, it’s important that the plan should always revolve around the individual patient and the specifics of their injury. No two treatment plans will be exactly the same.

However, there are of course a number of common factors present, with tried and tested jumper’s knee exercises being the staple of the programme.

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Important: When it comes to any source of pain in the body, it’s important to understand the nature of pain itself, in the first place.

Our current understanding of this incredibly complex human experience is that if the brain has credible evidence that there is danger — or potential danger — to your body tissues or to your body tissues or to you as a person, then it can protect you via pain.

The goal of successfully treating patellar tendonitis, or any other condition, is to understand and resolve the dangers your brain is perceiving.

In my opinion, one of the main issues for runners with patellar tendonitis is loading – asking your patella tendon to do too much work for its current capabilities, and not giving it enough rest to recover and get stronger.

The brain senses this and decides to protect you by eliciting pain. The pain encourages you to stop loading the knee and therefore the patellar tendon.

So, the first, and arguably most crucial part of patellar tendonitis treatment involves listening to the body and giving it what it wants.

Let me explain…

Initial Reduction of Patellar Tendon Loading

The first stage in treating patellar tendonitis is to take some load off the patellar tendon, in order to allow the pain levels to reduce.

We achieve this reduction in load by working out what activities are causing pain (running, squats, etc.) and adjusting the activity, or activities, to decrease the amount of load that the tendon is experiencing.

Common exercises and positions that load the patellar tendon include:

  • Squats
  • Lunges
  • Jumping and plyometric exercises
  • Running or walking downhill
  • Sitting with legs bent for a long time
  • Going up and down stairs
  • Wearing high heels
  • Running in shoes with a large heel-to-toe “drop”

You don’t always have to completely stop these activities. Instead, learning to modify the activity or training load is the key to successful treatment.

Here are some suggestions for how you can modify activities that aggravate your patellar tendon…

Activity Modifications for Patellar Tendonitis

If squats hurt: Decrease the load. You can achieve this by decreasing the weight you squat, decrease the range of movement you use, decrease the number of repetitions you do, increase the rest intervals in-between sets, change your technique by getting your bum back more and loading more through the hips than the knees.

Do you find it hurts more running in shoes with a bigger ‘drop’? If so, you may find that switching to a more minimal running shoe, or even barefoot, is enough to offload the knee and switch the load more to the foot and ankle.

If running, in general, causing your patellar tendon pain:.
Try these running re-education cues. They all generally shift load away from the knee.

  1. Increase your running cadence. Increase how many steps you take in a minute. Aim for 5%-10% increase and assess how it feels
  2. Improve your running posture. Work on running up tall. This will prevent the foot landing excessively in front of you (overstriding) as you try to catch a forward positioned centre of mass.
  3. Increase heel lift. Something like the piston cue will help to get an increase in heel lift at toe-off leading to a more circular movement of the foot, better knee drive and making it easier to land under your centre of mass.

If you’ve tried the steps above and the tendon is still very painful, then I would suggest a short break from the painful activity altogether.

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Can You Run with Patellar Tendonitis?

You may be able to continue running with patellar tendonitis if you can keep pain levels between 0 and 4 out of 10, and as long as the pain settles within 24 hours of activity. If the pain gets worse, you must stop.

Loading is an important part of tendon rehab, as I will go on to explain shortly, so you should be able to continue running, albeit to a modified programme, as long as your symptoms continue to follow a predictable reactive pattern and settle quickly post-run.

Can you run with patellar tendonitis?

The running technique cues listed above will help you reduce undue stress on the tendon when you run. However, running is, of course, a high-impact activity, and your knee will most likely require more recovery time between running workouts than it would if you were injury-free.

Listen to your body and give it what it needs!

Rehab Exercises for Patellar Tendonitis

As jumper’s knee exercises go, a great tool for pain relief during this early stage of jumper’s knee rehab is isometric strengthening. This is where we put a high load through the tendon but use a static hold.

To set this exercise up I would use a single leg press, as you can control the weight easily on this machine. Aim for 30-45 second holds at mid-range knee flexion. The weight should be somewhere around 70% of your one rep max. I recommend 4-6 sets, two per day.

With these jumper’s knee exercises I always tell my clients that pain levels between 0 and 4 out of 10 that settle within 24 hours are acceptable. Any more than this then you need to make the exercise easier by dropping the weight.

Once the pain is under control (doesn’t have to be completely gone but certainly well controlled) it’s time to hit the heavy-slow programme and inject some power into this tendon.

Increase the loading capacity of the tendon

This is where we take advantage of the law of adaptation. Put enough stress through the patellar tendon to elicit an adaptation without flaring up pain, allow it to rest, recover, adapt (get stronger and then load it again), and repeat. Very simple progressive training.

Exactly which patellar tendonitis exercises I choose will be dependent on the client in front of me, I will always take into account their preference and how irritable their knee is. I generally use a combination of heavy slow-loading and power exercises.

With all the jumper’s knee exercises, I tattoo in the mind (not literally) the phrase:

“Pain levels between zero and four out of 10 that settle within 24 hours are acceptable”

If we are inside these parameters we are OK to continue. If we are outside the parameters, we never stop but we adjust by dropping weight or reps.

A typical 12 week heavy slow-loading programme will look like this:

12 week slow heavy programme of jumper's knee exercises for patellar tendonitis

I may pick 1-2 jumper’s knee exercises to do this with, say a single leg press and a weighted squat. The load should be as high as you can without pushing pain over a four out of 10.

Return to Running after Patellar Tendonitis

As running is a plyometric activity that takes advantage of the stretch-shorten cycle, we need to restore the tendon’s ability to cope.

This is why I add power or plyometric exercises to the programme. I tend to start these power exercises approximately four weeks into the loading programme and always monitor symptoms closely.

Any symptoms outside of the “four out of 10 and settles within 24 hours” parameter calls for an adjustment in load.

For power exercises, I usually start with skipping and/or a walk-run programme and may progress, if needed, to jump squats and downhill jump squats.

Here’s a link to the walk-run programme that I use to help runners return from injury. It is simple, graded and effective.

What Else Contributes to Patellar Tendon Pain?

Now the third and final part of the patellar tendonitis treatment puzzle is one of the most important. Remember I said that pain can manifest in your body when the brain perceives a threat to your bodily tissues or to your safety?

This phase is about decreasing any other aspects that may be causing the brain to perceive a threat.

What Else Are You Dealing With?

It may surprise you that even a threat to your job or your finances can influence how your brain perceives pain. It could be a threat to your relationships or your hobbies. The threat could be that you think you have something seriously wrong with you, like a broken bone, or you could be worried about what this injury means for the future.

Perhaps you’re worried that you’re not going to line up in the race you trained for all year, and it’s causing all kinds of stress and anxiety.

Maybe you have post-traumatic stress disorder like many of the soldiers I treat today and the background stress and re-living of the trauma is constantly keeping your threat levels high.

All of these things cause stress, worry, frustration and anger and are perceived by the brain as threatening. If the brain perceives danger in any way, it will move to protect you. That may be by increasing or prolonging your pain or flooding your body with hormones that fire your fight-or-flight system. These changes alter your physiology and none of these things are conducive to healing or to decreasing pain levels associated with jumper’s knee. The challenge for us as clinicians is to work-out if any of this is going on and, if it is, address it.

Some of these threats are easily dealt with by simple communication whereas others, like PTSD, may need to be referred out to another professional such as a trauma specialist psychotherapist.

Here’s a short video which does a great job of discussing many of the various factors involved in how and why we all feel pain differently.

Example Case of Jumper’s Knee from Running

A simple example of how to decrease threat levels would be a runner who has just started running hills and noticed he now has a painful knee.

His examination has revealed jumper’s knee. He is really worried is going to miss the marathon and is scared stiff this pain is an early indication of arthritis.

In this case, I would deal with the loading issues as above but would make sure I spent plenty of time with this patient explaining his condition to him, reassuring him that his condition is not arthritis and he has nothing to fear or worry about in the future. If the patient believes me (which is the key point) this will reassure him and start to switch-off his alarms and stress systems, decreasing the perceived threat in his brain and therefore the protective pain response associated with it.

Many skilled communicators will do this naturally without realising the positive effects they have on pain.

I hope you now have better a grasp on how to manage cases of jumper’s knee from running and look forward to answering any questions in the comments below.

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Last updated on March 2nd, 2021.

10 Comments

  1. Hi. I just wanted to say that I have recently found your videos online and have started to use them in addition to my prescribed PT exercises.I have runners knee and Itb syndrome. Lately both have been acting up. I just finished PT for the second time this past August. I have been doing all of my PT exercises daily alternating between core stability and lower body. I’m not a runner but I like to work out on the elliptical, arc trainer or bike. My pain came back after a couple of months rest. Can you tell me of some good ITb stretches for someone who is inflexible? Is there any brace I could wear for my knee valgus while still trying to workout? Also how do I strengthen my quads if bending my knee is painful? Any tips on how to do lunges with knee valgus? Sorry for all the questions.

    Thanks

    Allyson

    1. Hi Allyson,

      Thanks for getting in touch. I think for both conditions I would advise hip strengthening, especially gluteus medius and quads strengthening exercises. If you can’t bend your knee due to pain then focus on inner range quads exercises or isometric quads exercises. You can put all those terms into google or youtube to get some ideas. I know James has great exercises on most of these things so have a look around his video catalogue. I wouldn’t worry too much about ITB stretching because ITB syndrome is seen as more of a compressive problem these days and most ITB stretches actually place you into compression so can make you worse. I would also make sure you are being graded with your exercises and day to day activities to give your knees the chance to adapt to the loading/strengthening and get stronger without pushing them “over the edge”

      Hope this helps Allyson, good luck!

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  3. What do you recommend for treating hip flexor pain,what exercise and recovery

  4. Hi, I found this a great and informative read……I have high hamstring tendinitis (a tear in the hamstring tendon……or in my case both). Can you offer similar exercises for rehab for my injury please…..I’ve had it for nearly 2 years and have seen several medical consultants……everything they have given me to do has failed…….I’ve also had shockwave treatment…….this helped a little. Thanks Mark

  5. This is a big help! The “walk-run programme” link is not working btw, how can I access that? Is it normal for my patella tendons to feel good during these loading/plyo workouts but be tender and sore the next day? Thanks for the great information

    1. Thanks, Liam, Glad you find it helpful. I’ve just updated the link – thanks for letting me know! Yep, definitely normal to feel a little discomfort after this type of loading. As long as it’s a short term flare-up and not getting more painful over time, it’s all part of the process. Best of luck with your rehab!

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