Runner's knee, clinically termed patellofemoral pain syndrome (PFPS), is the most common running injury in published epidemiological surveys, accounting for around 20 to 25 percent of running-related musculoskeletal complaints. The treatment evidence has evolved substantially over the past decade, away from the legacy emphasis on quadriceps isolation and toward a more comprehensive picture that includes hip strength, motor control, and load management. This article sets out a structured treatment protocol that respects the current evidence base and the practical realities of Indian running training.
The protocol is built like an app onboarding flow. Every step has a reason. Every progression has a check. Every check has a fallback if the answer is no. The aim is to give you a defensible framework you can work through alongside a sports physiotherapist.
Before you start: the readiness checks
This is a treatment protocol for runners with a clinical diagnosis of patellofemoral pain syndrome. Three conditions should be met before you begin.
Check 1: Confirmed diagnosis. Anterior knee pain reproduced by activities such as squatting, descending stairs, sitting with knees flexed for prolonged periods (the so-called movie-goer's sign), and running, particularly downhill. A sports physiotherapist or sports physician has examined you and excluded other causes such as patellar tendinopathy, meniscal pathology, or osteoarthritis.
Check 2: No red flags. No locking, no significant swelling, no instability, no history of trauma producing the pain. If any of these features are present, the differential diagnosis is wider and requires further clinical assessment before this protocol applies.
Check 3: Realistic adherence commitment. You can allocate 20 to 30 minutes, three times per week, for the next 12 weeks. The exercise-based treatment of PFPS requires consistency; the published evidence is unambiguous that intermittent application produces inferior outcomes.
If any check fails
Address the failed check before progressing. The most common reason for treatment failure in PFPS is initiating a generic exercise programme without confirming the diagnosis and the absence of red flags. The exercises themselves are largely safe, but the time spent on them is wasted if the underlying problem is something else.
Phase 1: Load management and pain reduction (weeks 1 to 3)
The first phase aims to bring symptoms into a manageable range so that the loading work in phase 2 can proceed without aggravation. The 2018 work by Collins and colleagues in BJSM on PFPS treatment principles is the most useful contemporary synthesis.
Step 1: Modify running, do not stop. Reduce weekly running volume to the level at which pain stays at or below 3 out of 10 during the session and settles within 24 hours. This is often 40 to 60 percent of pre-injury volume. Complete cessation is rarely necessary and is associated with poorer outcomes than continued modified loading in the published evidence.
Step 2: Adjust running terrain. Avoid downhill running and significant gradients. Downhill running produces high patellofemoral joint loads, particularly during deceleration. Flat to mildly undulating terrain only in phase 1.
Step 3: Begin foundational exercises. Three sessions per week of phase 1 exercises (described below). The pain monitoring rule applies: pain during exercise at or below 3 out of 10, settling within 24 hours. Pain exceeding the threshold means the exercise should be modified to lower load or eliminated for the session.
Phase 1 exercises
Exercise 1: Quadriceps isometrics, 3 sets of 10 holds of 10 seconds. Sit with the knee at 60 degrees of flexion, contract the quadriceps without movement. Why: builds quadriceps activation without the joint loading of dynamic movements; isometrics also have a documented short-term analgesic effect on tendon and joint pain.
Exercise 2: Glute bridges, 3 sets of 12. Lie on back, knees bent, lift hips to form a straight line from shoulders to knees. Why: activates the gluteus maximus, which contributes to femoral control during running stance.
Exercise 3: Clamshells, 3 sets of 15 per side. Side-lying with knees bent, lift the top knee while keeping feet together. Why: targets the gluteus medius, which controls femoral adduction and internal rotation during single-leg stance. The published evidence consistently links hip muscle weakness with PFPS.
Exercise 4: Single-leg balance, 3 sets of 30 seconds per side. Stand on one leg with soft knee. Why: establishes baseline proprioception and identifies asymmetry.
Phase 2: Strengthening the chain (weeks 4 to 8)
Phase 2 progresses to dynamic loading of the knee, hip, and lower limb chain. The 2019 systematic review by Lack in BJSM concluded that combined hip and knee strengthening produces superior outcomes to knee strengthening alone for PFPS.
Exercise 1: Step-ups, 3 sets of 10 per side. Step onto a 30 to 40 cm box, drive through the heel, return with control. Why: integrates quadriceps and glute activation in a functional pattern that resembles stair climbing and running stance.
Exercise 2: Single-leg squats to chair, 3 sets of 8 per side. Squat down to a chair touch on one leg, return up with control. Why: progresses to unilateral loading and trains the frontal-plane control that is often deficient in PFPS.
Exercise 3: Side-lying hip abduction, 3 sets of 15 per side. Lie on side, lift top leg slowly to roughly 30 degrees, lower with control. Add a light ankle weight as tolerated. Why: targeted gluteus medius strength, with the controlled tempo emphasising the slow-twitch fibres that dominate sustained running.
Exercise 4: Hip thrusts, 3 sets of 10. Shoulders on a sofa or low bench, feet on the floor, drive hips up to a straight line. Add load as tolerated. Why: heavy hip extension loading, which targets the gluteus maximus more effectively than glute bridges alone.
The pain and progression check
Pain during and after each session must stay within the 24-hour rule. Running volume can increase by 10 percent per week as tolerated. By the end of phase 2, the target is symptom-free running for 30 minutes on flat ground at conversational pace. If this is not achieved, hold at phase 2 for an additional two to three weeks.
Phase 3: Functional integration and form work (weeks 9 to 12)
Phase 3 integrates the strength gains with running-specific patterns and addresses the biomechanical features associated with PFPS recurrence.
Step 1: Cadence assessment and adjustment. If your running cadence is below 170 steps per minute, a modest increase of 5 to 10 percent reduces patellofemoral joint loading per stride in the published biomechanical evidence. Use a metronome or a watch-based cadence cue, and aim for a controlled change rather than a sudden one.
Step 2: Pelvic drop and femoral control. Have a video of your running form recorded from behind. Visible contralateral pelvic drop and visible knee valgus (knee falling toward the midline) during stance are common features in PFPS and indicate the need for continued hip strengthening. Address them through the phase 2 exercises rather than through conscious form changes during running.
Step 3: Reintroduce hills and intensity carefully. Hill running and intensity work can return in phase 3, starting with gentle uphill segments only. Downhill running and full-effort intervals are the highest-load patterns and should be the last components reintroduced.
Phase 3 exercise additions
Continue phase 2 exercises and add the following.
Exercise 1: Lateral lunges, 3 sets of 10 per side. Step laterally, hinge at the hips, return to centre. Why: frontal-plane loading that complements the sagittal-plane work of squats and lunges.
Exercise 2: Single-leg deadlifts, 3 sets of 8 per side. Hinge at the hips on one leg, with the other extended behind. Light dumbbell as load progresses. Why: posterior chain strength and dynamic balance, key components of single-leg stance during running.
Phase 4: Maintenance and return to full training (week 13 onwards)
By the end of phase 3, you should be running at or near pre-injury volume on flat to mildly undulating terrain, with symptom-free completion of 30 to 45 minute easy runs. Phase 4 is the maintenance phase that consolidates the gains and reduces recurrence risk.
The maintenance dose is two strength sessions per week, 20 to 25 minutes each, mixing phase 2 and phase 3 exercises. The published evidence is consistent that PFPS recurrence is associated with discontinuation of the strengthening work after symptom resolution. Maintenance is the long game.
The race readiness assessment
A return to short-distance racing (5K or 10K) is reasonable from phase 4 onward. Half-marathon racing is appropriate when you have completed at least 4 to 6 weeks of symptom-free training at typical pre-injury volume. Full marathon racing warrants a more conservative timeline, with a structured plan that includes adequate long-run progression and an integrated maintenance strength programme.
Adjuncts: what helps and what does not
The PFPS literature includes several adjuncts that warrant mention.
Patellar taping. The 2015 Cochrane review by Callaghan and Selfe found limited evidence for patellar taping as a sole intervention but reasonable evidence as an adjunct to exercise in the short term. McConnell taping or Kinesio taping can provide symptomatic relief during the early phases.
Foot orthotics. The 2010 trial by Collins in BMJ found that prefabricated foot orthotics produced modest short-term benefit compared to flat insoles for PFPS. The effect was small but consistent. Orthotics are not a substitute for the strengthening work but may help selected runners with pronounced foot pronation.
Manual therapy. The evidence base for manual therapy in PFPS is limited. As an adjunct alongside exercise it may produce short-term symptomatic relief; as a primary treatment it does not appear to produce sustained improvement.
Imaging. Routine imaging is rarely indicated in straightforward PFPS. Imaging is appropriate when red flags are present, when symptoms fail to respond to 8 to 12 weeks of appropriate treatment, or when the differential diagnosis remains uncertain.
The supporting framework
The complete library of exercises and progressions sits in our exercises library. For the broader recovery framework that supports the rehabilitation, see our recovery guides. The dedicated treatment of runner's knee and related anterior knee conditions, including longer-form articles, sits in our runner's knee section. The full landscape of running injuries is mapped in the injuries hub.
Planning the next training block
Once the 12-week treatment protocol is complete and maintenance is established, you are ready to plan a structured training block toward a race goal. The STRIDD plan generator can build a plan that respects the volume ceiling you have established and incorporates the continued strength work that PFPS history warrants. The Running Lab covers race-specific guides for events across the Indian calendar.
Patellofemoral pain syndrome is the most common running injury and one of the most treatable. The published evidence on combined hip and knee strengthening, load management, and form work is robust. Most runners who follow a structured protocol return to full training within 12 to 16 weeks. The discipline is in the consistency of the loading work, not in any single intervention.