Knee pain is one of the most common musculoskeletal complaints.
And one of the most common assumptions patients hear is:
“It’s probably arthritis.”
Sometimes that is correct.
Sometimes it is incomplete.
And sometimes it is simply wrong.
Because knee pain is a symptom—not a diagnosis.
This distinction matters.
Assuming all knee pain is arthritis can delay appropriate diagnosis, create frustration, and lead patients down the wrong treatment path.
The more useful question is:
“What is actually causing the pain?”
Arthritis Is Common—But Not The Only Explanation
Osteoarthritis is certainly common, especially as people get older.
But many other conditions can also cause knee pain.
Examples include:
- meniscus pathology
- ligament injury
- tendon-related pain
- bursitis
- patellofemoral pain
- inflammatory arthritis
- referred pain from the hip
- crystal-related joint conditions
- overload syndromes
- soft tissue irritation
Different causes may require different treatment pathways.
This is why assumption-based diagnosis can be problematic.
The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) emphasises diagnosis based on clinical assessment rather than simplistic assumption or imaging alone.
Common Causes Of Knee Pain That Are Not Always “Just Arthritis”
1. Meniscus Problems
The meniscus helps with:
- shock absorption
- load distribution
- movement stability
Meniscal pathology may cause:
- twisting pain
- locking
- catching
- swelling
- bending discomfort
- sudden symptom changes
Degenerative meniscal changes may also coexist with osteoarthritis.
2. Ligament Injury
Ligaments stabilise the knee.
Problems may involve:
- instability
- giving way
- swelling
- movement hesitation
- post-injury pain
Not all ligament injuries are dramatic sports injuries.
3. Tendon Overload
Tendon-related pain may occur around:
- the patellar tendon
- quadriceps tendon
- surrounding tendon structures
Symptoms may worsen with:
- stairs
- repeated loading
- jumping
- rising from sitting
- overuse
This can overlap with arthritis-like symptoms.
4. Patellofemoral Pain
Pain around the kneecap area may behave differently from typical osteoarthritis.
Symptoms may worsen with:
- stairs
- prolonged sitting
- squatting
- repeated bending
This can easily be confused with arthritis.
5. Bursitis
Inflammation or irritation around bursae may cause:
- local swelling
- tenderness
- pressure sensitivity
- focal pain
This behaves differently from internal joint degeneration.
6. Inflammatory Arthritis
Some inflammatory conditions may present with knee symptoms.
Examples:
- rheumatoid arthritis
- psoriatic arthritis
- crystal-related inflammatory conditions
Pattern recognition matters.
Osteoarthritis and inflammatory arthritis are not interchangeable diagnoses.
7. Referred Pain
The knee is not always the true source.
Pain may sometimes be referred from:
- the hip
- the lower back
- surrounding biomechanical structures
Treating the knee alone may then miss the actual problem.
8. Mixed Diagnoses
This is very common.
A patient may have:
- osteoarthritis + meniscus pathology
- osteoarthritis + tendon overload
- arthritis + gait compensation
- arthritis + inflammatory features
Real-world knee pain is often not tidy.
Why X-Rays Can Mislead
A common clinical trap:
An X-ray shows degenerative changes.
The assumption becomes:
“That explains the pain.”
But degenerative imaging findings are common in adults.
And symptoms do not always correlate directly.
Osteoarthritis Research Society International (OARSI) guidance supports interpreting imaging in broader clinical context rather than relying on structural findings alone.
Common Misunderstandings
“If I’m older, it must be arthritis.”
No.
Age increases probability, but does not confirm diagnosis.
“If X-ray shows arthritis, that must be the cause.”
Not necessarily.
Other diagnoses may coexist.
“Knee swelling means arthritis.”
No.
Many conditions can cause swelling.
“If treatment is not helping, the arthritis must be worsening.”
Not always.
The diagnosis itself may need reconsideration.
What This Means For Patients
Useful practical questions include:
- Does the symptom pattern fit arthritis?
- Was there an injury trigger?
- Is locking happening?
- Is swelling unusual?
- Is the pain focal or diffuse?
- Could another diagnosis explain this better?
- Is imaging being interpreted appropriately?
The key question is:
“What diagnosis actually fits my symptoms?”
Practical Decision-Making Considerations
Assessment may involve:
- symptom timing
- onset pattern
- injury history
- swelling
- locking
- instability
- movement triggers
- imaging interpretation
- broader medical context
Based on over 20 years of clinical practice, Dr Terence Tan, founder of The Pain Relief Clinic Singapore, notes that patients sometimes become anchored to the label “arthritis” early, when the more practical issue is whether that label genuinely explains the symptom pattern.
When Further Assessment May Matter
Further review may be particularly important when:
- symptoms began suddenly
- locking develops
- instability occurs
- swelling is unusual
- treatment repeatedly fails
- pain seems disproportionate
- diagnosis remains uncertain
- symptoms behave atypically
Frequently Asked Questions
Is knee pain usually arthritis?
Not always.
Arthritis is common, but not the only explanation.
Can arthritis and meniscus problems happen together?
Yes.
This is common.
Does X-ray confirm the diagnosis?
Not by itself.
Imaging requires clinical interpretation.
Can hip problems cause knee pain?
Yes.
Referred pain can occur.
Is swelling always arthritis?
No.
Many conditions may cause swelling.
What if treatment is not helping?
Diagnosis may need reassessment.
Should diagnosis come before treatment?
Yes.
Better diagnosis usually improves treatment decisions.
About the contributor
Dr Terence Tan is a Singapore licensed medical doctor with over 20 years of clinical practice and founder of The Pain Relief Clinic Singapore (https://painrelief.com.sg).
Medical Disclaimer
This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute personalised medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendations. Individual medical decisions should be made in consultation with an appropriately licensed healthcare professional.
