The VerdictHIGH CONVICTIONVerdict Score 83

Your tendon below the kneecap is fraying — rest makes it worse, the right load fixes it.

Tonight, stand against a wall, slide down until your thighs are at 45 degrees, and hold for 45 seconds. Do 5 rounds. If you feel the burn right below your kneecap, that's your first rehab session for jumper's knee.

  1. What this actually is: Your knee pain isn't inflammation — it's your tendon's structure slowly breaking down, and that breakdown won't reverse without the right kind of loading.
  2. The myth that won't die: Stopping all activity is the most common advice given for jumper's knee, and it's the approach most likely to make it permanent.
  3. Start here: Slow, heavy leg exercises done every other day — not rest, not stretching, not ice — are the only thing that rebuilds the tendon structure.

Think of your patellar tendon like a fraying climbing rope. If you stop using it completely, the fibers weaken further — tendons need gentle tension to align and repair. The trick is finding the load that rebuilds the rope without tearing what's left. Too much and it frays faster. The right amount, applied slowly every other day, and the rope gets stronger week by week.

SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.

Physio Protocol

Patellar Tendinopathy

Jumper's Knee — Extensor Mechanism, Inferior Patellar Pole

HIGH Conviction Knee Dutch CPG 2024

Tonight: stand against a wall, slide down until your thighs are at 45 degrees, hold for 45 seconds. Do 5 rounds.

If you feel the burn right below your kneecap, that's your first rehab session — isometric holds like this give immediate pain relief by calming the nervous system's alarm signals without further damaging the tendon.

5 minutes. No equipment. Zero setup.

Your tendon below the kneecap is fraying — rest makes it worse, the right load fixes it.

Think of your patellar tendon like a fraying climbing rope. If you stop using it entirely, the fibers don't repair — they weaken further, because tendons need gentle tension to align and rebuild. The trick is finding the load that strengthens the rope without tearing what's left. Too much and it frays faster. The right amount, applied slowly every other day, and it gets stronger week by week. The catch: this process takes months, not days.

  1. What this actually is: Your knee pain isn't from swelling or inflammation — it's from your tendon's structure slowly breaking down, and that breakdown won't reverse without the right kind of loading.
  2. The myth that won't die: Stopping all activity is the most common advice given for jumper's knee, and it's the approach most likely to make it permanent.
  3. Start here: Slow, heavy leg exercises every other day — not rest, not stretching, not ice — are the only thing that rebuilds tendon structure. Wall sits are your starting point.

Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling

A Structural Problem, Not an Inflammatory One

Patellar tendinopathy develops across three stages — and the stage you're at determines exactly what loads are appropriate. Getting this wrong is why most self-treatment fails.

Stage 1

Reactive

Sudden load spike → tendon swells with water to protect itself. Collagen intact. Reversible with load reduction.

Stage 2

Dysrepair

Failed healing attempt. Matrix breaks down, new blood vessels grow in. Structurally compromised.

Stage 3

Degenerative

Chronic structural failure. The damaged core can't heal — rehab loads the surrounding healthy tissue instead.

Patellar tendon anatomy — cinematic visualization of the extensor mechanism and inferior patellar pole

The Metabolic Factor

In people with Type 2 diabetes, obesity, or metabolic syndrome, a separate mechanism is at play. Excess blood sugar attaches to collagen fibers (a process that creates what researchers call AGEs — advanced glycation end-products), making the tendon brittle and unresponsive to heavy loading. Standard heavy exercises often cause flare-ups in this group. Blood flow restriction training (BFRT) — lighter loads with a cuff restricting blood flow out of the limb — bypasses this problem and is the recommended first approach for this population.

Assessment

Clinical assessment of patellar tendinopathy — cinematic knee examination

What the Patient Reports

Clinical Tests

TestWhat It DetectsAccuracy
Palpation — Inferior Pole Direct tenderness at the tendon enthesis Sn: 98% | Sp: 94%
Royal London Hospital Test Distinguishes tendon from fat pad and PFJ pain Sn: 88% | Sp: 98%
Single-Leg Decline Squat (SLDS) Load-related pain provocation LR+: 4.2 | LR–: 0.4
VISA-P Questionnaire Severity scoring and progress tracking (0–100) Sn: 78% | Sp: 80%

Royal London Hospital Test: Palpate the inferior pole with the knee fully straight. Then palpate again at 90° of bend. If pain drops significantly in the bent position — positive. This distinguishes tendon pain (reduced when the tendon is slackened) from fat pad pain (which increases).

Key Differentials

Differential diagnosis of anterior knee pain — clinical anatomy

VISA-P Severity Reference:

<50
Severe — daily function affected
50–75
Moderate — sport limited
>75
Mild — return to recreation

When to Stop and Refer

Red flags in patellar tendinopathy — urgent referral indicators

🚨 Can't Fully Straighten the Knee + Palpable Gap

Loss of active terminal knee extension + feeling a gap in the tendon below the kneecap = suspected patellar tendon rupture. Urgent A&E / orthopaedic consultation required — same day.

🚨 Pain at Rest / Night Pain + Systemic Symptoms

Unremitting night pain, pain independent of any movement, unexplained weight loss, or fever could indicate intraosseous neoplasm or infection. Urgent MRI and specialist referral.

🚨 Bilateral Enthesopathy + Morning Stiffness >60 Minutes

Enthesopathy at both knees, prolonged morning stiffness, and history of psoriasis or gut problems suggests inflammatory arthritis (ankylosing spondylitis, psoriatic arthritis). Rheumatology referral — check HLA-B27.

⚠️ Recent Fluoroquinolone Antibiotics or Repeated Steroid Injections

Ciprofloxacin and related antibiotics significantly increase spontaneous tendon rupture risk. Prior steroid injections into the tendon core have the same effect. Avoid aggressive loading; consider ultrasound to assess tendon integrity first.

What's Changed in the Evidence

Eccentrics vs Heavy Slow Resistance

Purdam 2004 / Alfredson protocol (widely reproduced)

Eccentric-only decline squat (3×15 twice daily) was the gold standard for over a decade.

Kongsgaard 2009, RCT n=217 / Zhang meta-analysis 2026

HSR equals eccentrics for pain relief but is superior for function, patient satisfaction, and collagen turnover.

Follow: HSR is now the preferred choice. Eccentrics remain valid but secondary — compliance is lower and peak loads are limited compared to progressive heavy resistance.

Rest vs Load Modification

Historical GP advice

"Stop all activity and let it settle."

Dutch CPG 2024 / JOSPT 2015

Complete rest causes stress-deprivation catabolism — the tendon weakens further without mechanical input.

Follow: Load modification from day one. Reduce aggravating loads, not all loading.

Shockwave Therapy as Standalone

Traditional recommendation

ESWT widely recommended as a primary fix for chronic tendinopathy.

2021 NMA / 2023 meta-analysis

ESWT shows negligible effect compared to placebo or exercise alone when used as a standalone treatment.

Follow: ESWT only as an adjunct to exercise for chronic refractory cases. Exercise is non-negotiable.

Where the Research Falls Short

Research populations vs your actual patients

The Research Finding

Most RCTs enrolled young, motivated elite athletes (volleyball, basketball) performing heavy barbell squats in supervised lab settings.

The Real-World Gap

A 45-year-old desk worker can't begin with a 6-rep-max barbell squat. The protocol requires translation: leg press instead of barbell, lighter starting loads, more time on isometrics before progression.

Metabolic patients are missing from the data

The Research Finding

The AGE collagen cross-linking mechanism in T2DM/obesity is biochemically confirmed, but pure sports-medicine RCTs actively exclude these patients.

The Real-World Gap

Applying elite-athlete heavy loading to an obese patient with T2DM produces severe flare-ups. BFRT is the evidence-based bridge, but BFRT-specific RCTs for this population in patellar tendinopathy are still needed.

Pain monitoring relies on accurate self-reporting

The Research Finding

Protocols allow up to 5/10 pain during loading, with the 24-hour pain response as the progression gate.

The Real-World Gap

Fear-avoidant patients under-load (and don't progress). Competitive athletes over-load (and ignore the 24-hour flare). The 6-second slow tempo required for HSR is also difficult to maintain consistently without external cueing, reducing the adaptation stimulus.

Treatment Hierarchy

Patellar tendinopathy treatment — loading protocol visualization

Tier 1 — Strong Evidence

1

Heavy Slow Resistance (HSR) STRONG

6-second tempo (3s each direction). Start at 15RM load (~70% 1RM), progress toward 6RM (~85% 1RM) over 8–12 weeks. 3–4 sets, every other day. Leg press substitutes barbell squat for non-athletes.

Source: Kongsgaard 2009 (RCT n=217); Dutch CPG 2024

2

Isometric Loading (Rio Protocol) STRONG

5 sets × 45-second holds at 70% maximum effort. Knee at 60° initially, progress angle as pain allows. 2–3× per day. Provides immediate pain relief — appropriate for acute/reactive stage and in-season management.

Source: Rio et al. 2015 JOSPT

3

Blood Flow Restriction Training (BFRT) STRONG — mandatory for MetS/T2DM

30-15-15-15 reps, 20–40% 1RM, cuff at 40–80% limb occlusion pressure. Must be taken to 0–2 reps before failure — without this, low-load training produces no meaningful adaptation. First-line for metabolic phenotype.

MetS/T2DM: BFRT before HSR. Non-metabolic: use as Phase 1–2 bridge.

4

Baar Collagen Protocol MODERATE

15g collagen peptides + 50mg Vitamin C (obligate cofactor — not optional), consumed 60 minutes before every loading session. Doubles procollagen I synthesis markers in tendons. Applicable across all loading phases.

Source: Shaw et al. (human tendon biopsy)

See Tier 2 & 3 (adjuncts and refractory options)
5

Eccentric Decline Squat MODERATE

3 sets × 15 reps on 25° decline board. Bodyweight progressing to weighted backpack. 2× daily. Historically the gold standard — now secondary to HSR due to compliance issues and no demonstrated superiority.

6

PRP (Leukocyte-Rich) Injection + Exercise MODERATE

For refractory cases only (failed >6 months of structured conservative management). Must be combined with mandatory load-based exercise — PRP alone has no evidence of benefit.

7

ESWT (Shockwave) as Adjunct WEAK

Focused ESWT only (not radial). Viable as an adjunct for chronic refractory cases alongside exercise. No benefit as a standalone. Does not replace loading.

What Doesn't Work

  • Complete rest: Causes stress-deprivation catabolism — the tendon weakens further. Never prescribe complete rest for tendinopathy.
  • Corticosteroid injection into the tendon: Good for 4–6 weeks of pain relief, significant long-term deterioration, and elevated rupture risk (Kongsgaard 2009). Strictly contraindicated into the tendon core.
  • Passive modalities alone (ultrasound, laser, ice, compression): Zero evidence for long-term change in tendon capacity. May feel temporarily helpful but don't address the structural problem.
  • Stretching protocols: No evidence supports stretching as a treatment for patellar tendinopathy. May increase compressive load at the enthesis — particularly counterproductive in reactive stage.

Pain Monitoring Rule

Up to 5/10 pain during loading exercises is acceptable — the tendon needs to be challenged to adapt. The gate is the 24-hour response: if pain is elevated above baseline the next morning, you exceeded tolerance. Reduce volume by 20% and try again.

Pain below 3/10 means you're under-loading — progress load. Pain above 5/10 during exercise = reduce immediately.

Exactly What to Do

Wall Sit Isometrics

5 × 45 seconds | 2–3×/day

Knee at 60–90° against wall. Hold statically — no movement. 70% maximum effort. First exercise to start — provides immediate pain relief.

Leg Press (HSR)

3–4 × 12–15 → 6 reps | 3×/week

6-second tempo. Start at a weight you could do 15 times. Every 2 weeks, add weight and drop reps toward 6. Never lock out at the top.

Decline Squat (Eccentric)

3 × 15 | Daily

25° decline board. Lower slowly over 3 seconds. Pain 3–5/10 is expected and acceptable. Start bodyweight; add a backpack as it gets easier.

BFRT Leg Extension / Press

30-15-15-15 reps | 2–3×/week

Cuff at 40–80% LOP. 20–40% of 1RM. Must push to 0–2 reps from failure on each set — this is non-negotiable for the protocol to work.

Baar Protocol: 15g collagen peptides + 50mg Vitamin C → consume 60 minutes before every loading session. The Vitamin C is not optional — it's required for the collagen synthesis pathway to work.

Objective Clearance Criteria

Return to full activity is milestone-based, not time-based. All boxes must be ticked.

Step 1: Daily Life Cleared (All Patients)

Step 2: Gym & Recreational Sport

Step 3: Competitive Sport & High-Performance

What the Simple Answer Misses

The Warm-Up Trap

Patellar tendinopathy often "warms up" during exercise — pain eases mid-session. This is one of the most dangerous features of the condition. Athletes interpret it as "not that bad" and keep loading at full intensity. The 24-hour flare the next day tells the real story. The warm-up effect is a false signal: it reflects cortisol-driven pain suppression during exercise, not structural recovery.

Surgery Has Almost No Evidence Base

Surgical debridement and needle tenotomy for chronic patellar tendinopathy have no RCT data demonstrating superiority over conservative management. Surgery is appropriate for structural rupture — not pain management. The absence of good conservative care is the most common reason patients end up on an operating table.

Timeline Expectations Mismatch

The most common reason people fail to recover is abandoning the protocol too early. 3–6 weeks of exercises is not enough — the tendon's structural remodeling cycle runs at 12–16 weeks minimum. Athletes who start feeling better at 8 weeks often return to full training, reload the tendon before it's rebuilt, and restart the cycle. The protocol needs to continue for the full duration even when symptoms have resolved.

Cardio During Rehab

Cycling and rowing are confirmed low-stress alternatives to running during the recovery period. If your client has been running for calorie burn, this matters — a switch to cycling will slightly reduce their actual calorie output compared to what they've been eating to, and this should be accounted for.

Key References

Dutch Multidisciplinary Guideline 2024 — Most current CPG for patellar tendinopathy. Confirms progressive loading as first-line; supersedes JOSPT 2015 (which has exceeded the 5-year recency threshold).
Kongsgaard M et al., 2009 (RCT, n=217) — HSR equal to eccentrics for pain, superior for function and patient satisfaction. Corticosteroid injection showed significant long-term deterioration vs HSR.
Rio E et al., 2015, JOSPT — Isometrics (5×45s, 70% MVIC) produce immediate analgesia superior to isotonic loading for in-season pain management. Cortical pain inhibition confirmed.
Cook JL & Purdam CR — Tendinopathy Continuum Model — Reactive → Dysrepair → Degenerative staging framework. Determines appropriate loading intensity for each patient.
Shaw G et al. — Baar Collagen Protocol — 15g collagen + 50mg Vit C, 60 min pre-load, doubles procollagen I synthesis in tendons. Vitamin C is obligate cofactor.
Lasevicius T et al., 2022 — Low-load BFR must reach 0–2 RIR for hypertrophic stimulus (7.8% vs 2.8% growth at failure vs non-failure). Underpins BFRT prescription requirements.
Zhang et al., 2026 (meta-analysis) — HSR confirmed superior to eccentrics for functional outcomes across multiple trials.
2021 NMA / 2023 meta-analysis (ESWT) — ESWT shows negligible effect vs exercise or placebo when used as standalone treatment; viable only as adjunct in refractory cases.

Questions about your knee? DM me on Instagram for guidance.

Verdict Score

How strong is the evidence for the claims in this review? Higher = more confidence the claims are supported. This does not measure how large the effect is or how important it is compared with other levers.

83 Strong evidence
80–100Strong evidence ◀
60–79Mixed but supportive
40–59Uncertain
0–39Weak support

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