When patients hear “exercise for arthritis,” many imagine:
- walking
- stretching
- gentle movement
- light mobility work
But one of the most evidence-supported pillars of conservative knee osteoarthritis care is often something more specific:
strength training.
This sometimes surprises patients.
A common reaction is:
“Why would strengthening help if the problem is inside the joint?”
It is a fair question.
Because knee osteoarthritis is not simply about cartilage.
Function depends heavily on how well the surrounding musculoskeletal system supports movement.
Why The Knee Does Not Work Alone
The knee is not an isolated structure.
Everyday movement depends on coordinated support from:
- quadriceps
- gluteal muscles
- calf muscles
- hip stabilisers
- broader lower-limb movement systems
When these systems are weak or poorly conditioned, the knee may feel:
- less stable
- more painful
- more fatigued
- harder to trust
- less tolerant of activity
Strength training aims to improve these functional contributors.
Strength Training Is Not About “Fixing Cartilage”
Important clarification:
Strength training does not regrow cartilage.
It does not reverse established osteoarthritis.
That is not the goal.
The practical goals may include:
- improved muscular support
- better movement control
- greater walking tolerance
- reduced fatigue
- improved stair function
- increased confidence
- functional independence
The Osteoarthritis Research Society International (OARSI) supports exercise—including strengthening-focused approaches—as a core non-surgical management strategy for osteoarthritis where clinically appropriate.
Why Weakness Makes Symptoms Worse
Patients often focus entirely on structural findings.
But weakness can meaningfully worsen function.
Potential effects include:
- poorer gait efficiency
- reduced shock control
- increased movement hesitation
- earlier fatigue
- reduced stair confidence
- compensatory movement patterns
This can make symptoms feel worse—even when imaging has not changed.
Which Muscles Matter Most?
Quadriceps
These are often the first muscles patients hear about.
They help with:
- standing from sitting
- stair climbing
- walking control
- knee stabilisation
Weak quadriceps may worsen functional performance.
Gluteal Muscles
Hip support matters more than many patients realise.
Poor gluteal function may affect:
- gait efficiency
- alignment control
- lower-limb loading behaviour
- stair performance
Calf Muscles
Calves help with:
- propulsion
- walking mechanics
- movement efficiency
- lower-limb endurance
They are often overlooked.
Hip Stabilising Systems
Movement control is broader than the knee joint itself.
These systems influence:
- balance
- alignment
- dynamic control
- compensation patterns
Strength Training Is Not Bodybuilding
Patients sometimes become unnecessarily anxious.
Strength training does not mean:
- heavy powerlifting
- aggressive gym culture
- painful maximal loading
- reckless pushing through symptoms
Appropriate strength training is individualised.
The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) recommends exercise as core osteoarthritis care, which includes strengthening principles within practical self-management.
Why Strength Training Sometimes Fails
Common reasons:
- wrong exercise selection
- excessive loading too early
- poor technique
- symptom flare due to poor pacing
- inappropriate diagnosis
- unrealistic expectations
The problem is often execution—not the concept itself.
Why Walking Alone May Not Be Enough
Walking is useful.
But walking is not the same as structured strengthening.
Walking may not adequately address:
- specific muscle weakness
- movement inefficiency
- targeted functional deficits
This is why “just walk more” may be incomplete advice.
Common Misunderstandings
“If the joint is damaged, muscles cannot help.”
False.
Functional support often matters significantly.
“Strength training means lifting heavy weights.”
No.
Approach should match the individual.
“If strengthening hurts, it is harmful.”
Not automatically.
Context matters.
“Walking is enough.”
Not always.
Walking and strengthening serve different purposes.
What This Means For Patients
Useful practical questions include:
- Is weakness contributing to my symptoms?
- Which muscles are actually limiting function?
- Is walking enough?
- Am I loading too aggressively?
- Is my strengthening approach appropriate?
- Is the diagnosis complete?
The better question is:
“What functional deficits are making my knee harder to manage?”
Practical Decision-Making Considerations
Considerations may include:
- diagnosis confidence
- symptom severity
- baseline strength
- swelling
- fatigue
- movement quality
- exercise tolerance
- stair limitations
- functional goals
Based on over 20 years of clinical practice, Dr Terence Tan, founder of The Pain Relief Clinic Singapore, notes that patients often focus heavily on what scans show inside the joint, while underestimating how profoundly weakness and reduced conditioning can shape real-world symptoms and function.
When Further Assessment May Matter
Further review may be particularly important when:
- strengthening repeatedly worsens symptoms
- swelling escalates
- walking tolerance collapses
- instability develops
- diagnosis remains uncertain
- symptoms behave atypically
- progress stalls despite appropriate effort
Frequently Asked Questions
Does strength training regrow cartilage?
No.
Is strength training recommended for arthritis?
Yes.
Major international guidelines support strengthening-based exercise where appropriate.
Do I need a gym?
Not necessarily.
Strength principles can be applied in different ways.
What if strengthening hurts?
Context matters.
Technique, dosage, or diagnosis may need review.
Is walking enough?
Not always.
Walking and strengthening are not interchangeable.
Which muscles matter most?
Quadriceps are important, but broader lower-limb support also matters.
Is strength training safe?
Suitability depends on individual clinical context.
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.
