If your knee pain flares up on stairs, during squats, after a run, or even when you’ve been sitting with your knee bent for a while, you might be dealing with a patellar tracking issue.
Patellar tracking disorder (sometimes called patellar maltracking) is when the kneecap, the patella, doesn’t glide as smoothly as it should in the groove at the end of your thigh bone. When that tracking gets off, the joint can become irritated and painful, especially with repeated bending and loading. It often overlaps with what many medical resources call patellofemoral pain syndrome (PFPS), which is a standard “front of the knee” pain problem.
The good news is that most people don’t need anything dramatic to get back on track. Physical therapy is commonly recommended as a first-line, nonsurgical approach because it addresses the movement and strength factors that tend to drive symptoms in the first place.
What patellar tracking disorder can feel like
People describe it in a bunch of ways, but the patterns are pretty consistent:
- Achy pain around or behind the kneecap, especially with stairs, squatting, kneeling, running, jumping, or hills
- Pain after sitting with your knee bent for a long time (think car rides, meetings, movies)
- Clicking, popping, or a “grindy” sensation (not always painful, but sometimes)
- A feeling that the knee is “not tracking right,” or a mild sense of instability
- Flare-ups that come and go depending on activity volume
One important note: pain doesn’t automatically mean damage. With patellar tracking problems, symptoms often relate to irritation from the way the joint is loaded, not to a single catastrophic injury.
Why does the kneecap start tracking poorly
Your kneecap is influenced by a whole chain of factors, not just the knee itself. The patella is pulled on by the quadriceps (front thigh muscles), supported by the soft tissues around the joint, and influenced by how your hip and foot position the leg during movement.
Common contributors include:
- Muscle strength and coordination issues, especially quadriceps strength and hip strength (glutes and other hip stabilizers)
- Overuse or sudden training changes, like ramping up miles, hills, stairs, or squat volume too quickly
- Mobility or flexibility limitations, which can change how the kneecap loads when you bend and straighten your knee
- Movement patterns, like the knee collapsing inward during single-leg tasks (often tied to hip control)
- Foot mechanics, where specific patterns may contribute to how force travels up the leg, and some people benefit from supportive options as a complement to exercise
Sometimes anatomy plays a role too, but even then, improving strength, control, and loading tolerance can make a big difference in symptoms and function.
When you should get checked out right away
Most patellar tracking issues are not emergencies. But you should be evaluated promptly if you have:
- A kneecap that visibly dislocated (or feels like it “popped out”)
- Significant swelling after an injury
- Inability to bear weight, a locked knee, or rapidly worsening pain
- Numbness, tingling, fever, or redness and heat that’s spreading
If you’re not sure, it’s worth getting guidance to avoid guessing wrong.
How physical therapy helps, and why it works
Physical therapy for patellar tracking disorder isn’t just a list of random knee exercises. A good plan is targeted, progressive, and built around how you move.
Most clinical guidance and research-based best-practice recommendations emphasize exercise therapy and education as the foundation, often combining knee- and hip-targeted strengthening to improve pain and function.
Here’s what that typically looks like in PT:
1) We figure out what’s driving your symptoms
Your therapist will look at things like:
- How your kneecap moves, and what positions irritate it
- Hip strength, quadriceps strength, and single-leg control
- Mobility of the hip, knee, and ankle
- How you handle stairs, squats, lunges, running mechanics, or sport-specific tasks
- Training or work demands (what you do all day matters)
This matters because two people can have the same diagnosis and need different starting points.
2) Calm the irritation without shutting your life down
You don’t always need total rest, but you often need smarter loading.
That can include temporary changes such as limiting deep knee bends, managing stairs, adjusting running volume, and using short-term symptom management tools (ice, pacing strategies, or bracing/taping in some cases). Primary orthopedic and clinical resources describe activity modification and PT as key nonsurgical steps.
3) Build strength where it counts
A common theme in patellofemoral pain and tracking issues is that improving the system's capacity alters how the knee tolerates load.
Programs often include:
- Quadriceps strengthening (to support the kneecap through motion)
- Hip strengthening (glutes and hip stabilizers help keep the thigh aligned so the kneecap tracks better)
- Core and trunk control, when it’s relevant to how your leg moves underneath you
And it’s not just “do these three moves forever.” The key is progression, the correct dose, and tying it to your goals.
4) Address mobility and flexibility that change knee mechanics
Sometimes the issue isn’t weakness alone; it’s also stiffness that alters tracking or loading.
Stretching and mobility work can be helpful as part of a broader program, and some reviews of the literature show improvements in pain and function with therapeutic exercise approaches that include mobility components.
5) Fix the “how,” not just the “what.”
If your knee caves inward on stairs, or if your running stride overloads the front of the knee, you can get strong and still stay irritated.
That’s where coaching and retraining come in:
- Squat and stair mechanics
- Single-leg control
- Step-down strategies
- Running progression and (when appropriate) technique tweaks
Best practice guidance supports combining exercise therapy with education, then layering additional interventions based on the individual.
The big picture in the research is that these are typically considered supportive options around a strong exercise plan.
How long does recovery take?
It depends on how long symptoms have been around, how sensitive the joint is, and how consistent the plan is. Many people start noticing meaningful change within weeks when they’re doing the right level of strengthening and load management. Still, complete confidence with higher-level activities (running, jumping, deep squats) can take longer.
The mistake we see a lot is the boom-bust cycle: feeling better, doing everything again, flaring up, then resting completely. PT helps you build a ramp back to normal, instead of ping-ponging between extremes.
What you can do today (without guessing)
A few simple, safe moves that usually help while you’re waiting for an evaluation:
- Reduce the aggravating activity just enough to get symptoms to settle (often stairs, deep squats, hills, or high volume)
- Keep moving with low-irritation options (walking on flat ground, cycling with a comfortable seat height, or other low-impact activity that doesn’t spike pain)
- Avoid “pushing through” sharp pain at the kneecap during loaded bending
- If swelling or instability is present, get assessed sooner rather than later
How Advanced Care Physical Therapy can help
At Advanced Care Physical Therapy, we look at the whole chain: hip, knee, ankle, and the way you move in real life, not just what hurts when you point to it. Then we build a practical plan: fewer flare-ups, better mechanics, more substantial support around the kneecap, and a clear path back to the activities you actually care about.
If you’ve been dealing with stubborn front-of-knee pain, or you suspect your kneecap “isn’t tracking right,” schedule an evaluation. We’ll help you get answers and a plan that makes sense.


