This pilot study evaluates the preliminary effectiveness of a combined rehabilitation program incorporating hold-relax (H-R) stretching techniques and progressive therapeutic exercises on knee pain and range of motion (ROM) in adolescent athletes diagnosed with Osgood-Schlatter disease. Utilizing a retrospective, single-group pre-post design on a cohort of six athletic participants, this study aims to generate preliminary clinical evidence and assess feasibility to inform future larger-scale randomized controlled trials. Participants underwent a structured, multi-week rehabilitation protocol, with primary clinical outcomes assessed before and after the intervention period using validated measures of pain intensity and knee joint mobility.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
6
A target-specific, manual stretching technique administered by a physical therapist to address muscular tightness in the lower extremity. The protocol focuses on the bilateral quadriceps and hamstring muscle groups to reduce the cumulative tensile traction forces exerted on the tibial tuberosity. For each target muscle group, the procedure is performed as follows: Passive Stretch: The physical therapist moves the joint to the limit of comfortable range of motion (ROM) where mild muscle tightness is felt. Isometric Contraction: The participant performs an active, sub-maximal isometric contraction (approximately 50% of maximum voluntary contraction) against the therapist's manual resistance for 6 to 10 seconds, ensuring no actual joint movement occurs. Relaxation and Deeper Passive Stretch: The participant is instructed to relax completely, and the therapist immediately moves the limb passively into a newly gained, deeper range of motion, holding the stati
A structured, step-by-step active exercise program designed to build lower-limb load tolerance, correct biomechanical compensations, and stabilize the knee joint complex. The rehabilitation progresses systematically through targeted phases based on individual pain levels and movement quality:Phase 1 (Pain Mitigation and Muscle Activation): Focuses on isometric quadriceps setting, straight leg raises (SLR), gluteal bridging, and ankle/hip mobility exercises to avoid direct loading of the patellar tendon while minimizing disuse atrophy.Phase 2 (Strength and Load Tolerance): Introduces closed-kinetic chain exercises with controlled ranges of motion, including shallow wall sits, leg presses, bilateral squats, and progressive calf raises.Phase 3 (Eccentric and Functional Progression): Focuses on eccentric quadriceps strengthening (e.g., controlled step-downs) and sport-specific functional retraining to prepare the adolescent athlete's patellar tendon and tibial tubercle to absorb high groun
Batna 2 University
Batna City, Batna, Algeria
Change from Baseline in Knee Pain Intensity on the Visual Analog Scale (VAS)
Knee pain during athletic activity is assessed using a 10-centimeter Visual Analog Scale (VAS). The scale is a horizontal line where 0 centimeters indicates "no pain" and 10 centimeters indicates "the worst possible pain." The outcome is calculated as the change in the pain score (post-intervention score minus baseline score). A negative change indicates an improvement (reduction) in knee pain.
Time frame: Baseline (Day 1, pre-intervention) and post-intervention (Week 10, immediately following completion of the last rehabilitation session).
Change from Baseline in Active Knee Flexion Range of Motion
Active knee joint flexion range of motion measured in degrees of joint angle using a standard universal goniometer. The participant lies in a supine position and actively bends the knee as far as possible. The outcome is calculated as the change in degrees from baseline to post-intervention. An increase in degrees indicates an improved range of motion.
Time frame: Baseline (Day 1, pre-intervention) and post-intervention (Week 10, immediately following completion of the last rehabilitation session).
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