Persistent joint pain can leave you stuck between two very different recommendations – physiotherapy or arthroscopy.
If you’re unsure which one is right for your knee, shoulder, hip, ankle, or elbow, you’re not alone.
At Kauvery Hospital, this decision is guided by clinical evidence, movement assessment, and long-term outcomes– not assumptions or shortcuts.
The key is identifying what is causing your pain– not just where it hurts.
Physiotherapy focuses on improving how the joint functions by:
It is highly effective for:
Arthroscopy is a minimally invasive surgical procedure that repairs damage inside the joint, such as:
It is used when exercises alone cannot correct the problem.
Physiotherapy is usually enough if:
Arthroscopy is often needed if:
Structural damage requires structural repair.
Doctors reassess if:
When rehab fails to deliver lasting improvement, arthroscopy is considered – not as a failure, but as the next logical step.
Joint instability is a strong indicator for surgical evaluation.
Signs include:
Ignoring instability can lead to:
Treatment decisions also depend on how you use your body.
Physiotherapy may be enough if you:
Arthroscopy is often advised if you:
No. They work together.
Skipping rehab after surgery or delaying surgery when needed can compromise outcomes.
Delaying arthroscopy when it is clearly needed may result in:
Early, well-timed intervention often leads to simpler surgery and better recovery.
Every patient is evaluated through:
The aim is never “surgery first” or “exercise only” – but the right intervention at the right time.
How do I know if I need physiotherapy or arthroscopy?
If your pain is due to muscle weakness, stiffness, or overuse, physiotherapy usually works. If scans show ligament, cartilage, or meniscus damage, arthroscopy may be needed to fix the structure inside the joint.
Can physiotherapy fix a torn ligament or cartilage?
No. Physiotherapy can strengthen surrounding muscles and reduce pain, but it cannot repair torn ligaments or damaged cartilage. Structural injuries often require arthroscopy.
When should arthroscopy be considered?
Arthroscopy is considered when pain, swelling, instability, or joint locking continues despite proper physiotherapy, or when imaging confirms internal joint damage.
Is it safe to delay arthroscopy and continue exercises?
Delaying surgery when it is clearly required may worsen cartilage damage, increase pain, and lead to early arthritis. Early intervention often results in better recovery.
Does everyone need physiotherapy before arthroscopy?
In many cases, yes, Physiotherapy helps assess joint function, reduce inflammation, and prepare the joint. If rehab fails to give lasting improvement, arthroscopy is the next step.
Can physiotherapy and arthroscopy be used together?
Yes. They work best as a team. Physiotherapy prepares the joint before surgery and is essential after arthroscopy to restore strength, movement, and confidence.
Is physiotherapy better than arthroscopy for joint pain?
Physiotherapy is better for functional problems like stiffness or muscle weakness, while arthroscopy is needed for structural damage such as ligament or cartilage tears.
Kauvery Hospital is globally known for its multidisciplinary services at all its Centers of Excellence, and for its comprehensive, Avant-Grade technology, especially in diagnostics and remedial care in heart diseases, transplantation, vascular and neurosciences medicine. Located in the heart of Trichy (Tennur, Royal Road and Alexandria Road (Cantonment), Chennai (Alwarpet, Radial Road & Vadapalani), Hosur, Salem, Tirunelveli and Bengaluru, the hospital also renders adult and paediatric trauma care.
Chennai Alwarpet – 044 4000 6000 • Chennai Radial Road – 044 6111 6111 • Chennai Vadapalani – 044 4000 6000 • Trichy – Cantonment – 0431 4077777 • Trichy – Heartcity – 0431 4077777 • Trichy – Tennur – 0431 4022555 • Maa Kauvery Trichy – 0431 4077777 • Kauvery Cancer Institute, Trichy – 0431 4077777 • Hosur – 04344 272727 • Salem – 0427 2677777 • Tirunelveli – 0462 4006000 • Bengaluru – 080 6801 68011