Hip, Knee, Foot, & Ankle Pain
Hip, knee, foot, and ankle pain can make everyday movement harder and less comfortable.
Some people feel a sharp pain in the hip when standing up, aching around the knee on stairs, heel pain with the first steps in the morning, or ankle pain after walking or exercise. Swelling, stiffness, clicking, and a feeling of weakness or instability can also happen.
Symptoms may begin after a clear injury, such as a twist, fall, awkward step, or sporting incident.
In other cases, pain develops more gradually from repeated walking, running, standing, squatting, or spending long hours on hard surfaces.
Many cases are linked to irritation in the muscles, tendons, joints, ligaments, or other soft tissues around the area.
At Revitalize Physical Therapy, we look at how pain is affecting the way you move.
Your therapist will assess how the hip, knee, foot, and ankle work together during walking, stairs, squatting, and single-leg tasks.
We then build a treatment plan to ease pain, improve movement and strength, and help you return to daily activity with more confidence.
- Insurance Accepted
- Self-Pay plans available
- No Referrals Required
Causes of hip, knee, foot, & ankle pain
Pain in the lower body can come from joints, muscles, tendons, ligaments, or nearby nerves.
A useful starting point is to match the pain pattern, location, and activity that brings it on.
Hip pain is often linked to strain around the joint, tendon irritation, or arthritis. It may be felt in the groin, outer hip, thigh, or buttock, and often becomes more noticeable with walking, stairs, or getting in and out of a chair or car.
Knee pain commonly comes from irritation around the kneecap, overuse of the tendons, ligament or cartilage injury, or arthritis. It often feels worse with stairs, squatting, kneeling, running, or standing up after sitting for a while. Swelling, stiffness, and clicking can also occur.
Foot and ankle pain may follow a sprain, tendon irritation, joint stiffness, or heel pain. Heel pain is often worse with the first few steps in the morning or after rest. An ankle sprain can cause pain, swelling, bruising, and difficulty walking, especially after a twist or awkward landing.
Sometimes the painful area is not the only source of the problem. Weakness or stiffness higher or lower in the leg can increase strain elsewhere, and nerve irritation can cause pain, tingling, numbness, or weakness that travels into the leg or foot.
Less often, lower body pain may be linked to a fracture, inflammatory joint disease, infection, or another medical problem. Severe pain after a fall, inability to bear weight, marked swelling, fever, or a hot, red joint should be assessed promptly.
Book an appointment if:
• Your hip, knee, foot, or ankle pain has lasted longer than 2 weeks without clear improvement.
• Pain keeps coming back when you return to walking, running, work shifts, or sports.
• Stairs, squatting, standing, or walking are starting to feel limited or unpredictable.
• You feel stiffness most mornings or after sitting, and it takes time to “loosen up.”
• You notice weakness, poor balance, or a feeling that the leg does not feel stable.
• You have swelling or soreness after activity that keeps repeating week after week.
If any of these sound familiar, booking an appointment at Revitalize Physical Therapy can help you get a clear plan instead of guessing what to do next.
Ask For urgent appointment or call doctor if:
• You cannot put weight on the leg after an injury, or you are limping badly.
• Your joint looks deformed, you heard a pop with immediate swelling, or you cannot move normally.
• You have new or worsening numbness, tingling, or weakness in the leg or foot.
• You have calf swelling, warmth, redness, or deep calf pain that is new and worsening.
• You have fever or you feel generally very unwell along with a hot, swollen joint.
These signs do not always mean something serious, but they should be checked quickly by your doctor or another medical professional.
Call 911 or go to the emergency room if:
• You have sudden shortness of breath, chest pain, fainting, or coughing up blood.
• You have a suspected fracture with severe pain, deformity, or uncontrolled swelling after a major fall or crash.
• You have a cold, pale, or blue foot with severe pain, numbness, or loss of pulse.
• You suddenly cannot walk or the leg gives out with severe weakness that is new.
• You have a serious injury with heavy bleeding or an open wound that will not stop bleeding.
These may be signs of a medical emergency.
Do not wait for a regular appointment.
Call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room.
Exercises & stretches for hip, knee, foot, & ankle pain
Gentle, regular movement can help reduce pain, improve joint motion, and rebuild strength through the leg.
For many lower body problems, the most helpful plan combines a small number of mobility and strengthening exercises, done consistently and progressed gradually.
Exercise is often used to improve flexibility, muscle strength, and tolerance to daily activity.
Common starting exercises include sit-to-stands, bridges, straight leg raises, and supported calf raises. These are often used to build strength around the hips, knees, and ankles without placing too much strain on the area early on.
For foot and ankle symptoms, simple ankle range of motion drills, calf raises, and balance work are also commonly used.
Stretching can also be useful when stiffness is part of the problem. Common options include a calf stretch for foot and ankle pain, especially heel pain or Achilles-related symptoms, and gentle hip mobility or hamstring stretches when the hip or knee feels tight.
These exercises are usually done slowly and within a comfortable range, rather than forcing into pain.
Exercises should feel manageable, with mild discomfort at most.
At Revitalize Physical Therapy, we choose exercises based on your exact pain pattern, walking mechanics, strength, and mobility so your programme is specific, safe, and easier to stick with.
How to ease hip, knee, foot, and ankle pain yourself
Many people can reduce mild to moderate symptoms at home with simple steps and smart activity changes.
Do:
Stay active with low-irritation options like short walks on flat ground, cycling, or pool exercise if tolerated.
Reduce the activity that triggers symptoms, but keep gentle daily movement to avoid stiffness.
Use ice for 10–15 minutes if swelling is present, or heat for 15–20 minutes if stiffness is the main issue.
Wear supportive shoes and avoid sudden long walks in unsupportive footwear.
Use simple load changes, like breaking one long walk into two shorter walks.
Book an appointment with a physical therapist if pain keeps returning or you want a clear plan to build strength safely.
Don’t:
Don’t push through sharp pain, limping, or swelling that keeps getting worse after activity.
Don’t return to running, jumping, or heavy leg workouts at full volume after a short rest break.
Don’t stretch aggressively into sharp pain, especially at the hip or Achilles (heel).
Don’t ignore locking, true giving-way, or a joint that repeatedly swells after activity.
Don’t rely only on pain medicine or rest without rebuilding strength and movement control.
Don’t keep wearing shoes that clearly worsen symptoms, especially for foot and ankle pain.
How we treat hip, knee, foot, & ankle pain
At Revitalize Physical Therapy, we start by identifying what is driving your pain in day-to-day movement.
Your therapist will ask where the pain is felt, what activities bring it on, how long it has been going on, and how it affects work, exercise, and daily tasks. We also assess joint movement, muscle strength, balance, walking, stairs, squatting, and single-leg control so we can see how the whole leg is working together.
Treatment is built around the tissues and movements involved, rather than relying on one method alone.A plan will often include progressive strengthening for the hips, thighs, calves, and feet, along with mobility work to improve stiffness and help the joints move more comfortably.
Movement retraining is also important, especially if walking, stairs, running, or repeated loading is increasing strain through the area.
Your plan is shaped around your goals, whether that means walking with less pain, managing stairs more easily, getting through work more comfortably, or returning to sport with confidence.
Common Questions about Hip, Knee, Foot, & Ankle Pain
The most common causes depend on age, activity, and where the pain sits. Hip pain often comes from joint arthritis or soft tissue irritation around the hip, and the pain location can give clues (groin often points to the joint, outer hip often points to nearby soft tissues).
Knee pain in adults most often comes from osteoarthritis, patellofemoral pain (pain around the kneecap), or meniscus-related problems.
Plantar fasciitis usually causes a sharp or stabbing pain under the heel or along the arch. The pain often feels worst with the first steps after rest, then it can ease as you move.
Achilles-related pain usually sits at the back of the heel or slightly above it in the tendon. It often feels stiff first thing in the morning and it can flare with hills, stairs, running, or pushing off the foot.
You should worry more if you cannot bear weight, the joint looks misshapen, swelling comes on suddenly, or you feel feverish or unwell with joint pain.
You should also seek urgent care if you have new calf swelling with warmth and redness, because that can match signs of a blood clot.
Yes. Hip weakness can change how the leg handles load during walking, stairs, squatting, and single-leg tasks. When the hip is not controlling movement well, extra strain can build further down the chain at the knee, ankle, or foot. This does not mean hip weakness is always the main cause, but it can be one factor that keeps lower-limb pain going.
A feeling that the knee or ankle is unstable can mean the joint is not tolerating load well or is not being supported properly during movement. After an injury, this can happen with ligament, tendon, cartilage, or meniscus problems, and people often describe it as the joint giving way, buckling, or not feeling trustworthy. It can also happen with pain, weakness, swelling, or reduced control around the joint, even when the problem is less severe. If the joint keeps giving way, you cannot bear weight properly, or the instability started after a twist, fall, or pop, it should be assessed.
Ready to Get Help for Lower Body Pain?
If hip, knee, foot, or ankle pain is limiting your work, exercise, or daily life, you don’t have to keep guessing. A focused physical therapy plan can make a real difference.
At Revitalize Physical Therapy, your therapist will listen to your story, examine how you move, explain what is likely driving your symptoms, and build a clear step-by-step plan to help you feel and move better.
Book an appointment today to take the next step toward less pain, better movement, and more confidence on your feet.
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