- Knee Pain

- Runner’s Knee

Patellofemoral pain syndrome also called runner’s knee refers to pain under and around your kneecap.
Know More - Osgood Schlatter Disease

Osgood-Schlatter disease refers to an overuse injury that occurs in the knee of growing children and adolescents.
Know More - Bursitis

A bursa is a small fluid-filled sac found between soft tissues and bones. It lubricates and acts as a cushion to decrease friction between bones when they move.
Know More - Knee Injury

Pain, swelling, and stiffness are the common symptoms of any damage or injury to the knee. If care is not taken during the initial phases of injury, it may lead to joint damage, which may end up destroying your knee.
Know More - Meniscal Injuries

The meniscus has no direct blood supply and for that reason, when there is an injury to the meniscus, healing is difficult.
Know More - Meniscal Tears

A sudden bend or twist in your knee causes the meniscus to tear. Elderly people are more prone to degenerative meniscal tears as the cartilage wears out and weakens with age.
Know More Launch Movie - Ligament Injuries

Ligaments are tough bands of tissue that connect one bone to another bone. The ligaments of the knee stabilize the knee joint.
Know More - ACL Tear

The ACL prevents the tibia from sliding out in front of the femur. Together with the posterior cruciate ligament (PCL), it provides rotational stability to the knee.
Know More - MCL Tear

The medial collateral ligament (MCL) is the ligament located on the inner part of the knee joint. It runs from the femur (thighbone) to the top of the tibia (shinbone) and helps in stabilizing the knee.
Know More - Medial Meniscus Syndrome

Medial meniscal injuries are usually considered as either traumatic or degenerative.
Know More - Chondral (Articular Cartilage Defects)

The articular or hyaline cartilage is the tissue lining the surface of the two bones in the knee joint.
Know More - Osteonecrosis of the Knee

Osteonecrosis is a condition in which the death of a section of bone occurs because of lack of blood supply to it.
Know More - Lateral Meniscus Syndrome

Lateral meniscus syndrome is characterized by an injury caused by the tearing of the cartilage tissue or a rare case of a congenital abnormality called a discoid meniscus, which results in knee pain.
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