Comparative Analysis of Proprioceptive Exercises versus Conventional Physical Therapy Interventions on Balance among patients with Knee Osteoarthritis

Authors

  • Muhammad Atif Khan Lincoln University College, Petaling Jaya, Malaysia Author
  • Satheesh Babu Natarajan Lincoln University College, Petaling Jaya, Malaysia Author
  • Muhammad Ahmed Azmi Al-Tibri Medical College Isra University Karachi Campus, Karachi, Pakistan Author
  • Hira Islam Al Hamd Institute of Physiotherapy & Health Sciences, Karachi, Pakistan Author
  • Muhammad Asif Department of Rehabilitation & Health Sciences, Nazeer Hussain University, Karachi, Pakistan Author
  • Muhammad Danial Baig Chughtai Department of Rehabilitation & Health Sciences, Nazeer Hussain University, Karachi, Pakistan Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.61919/m69ye988

Keywords:

knee osteoarthritis, proprioception, balance training, Berg Balance Scale, physical therapy, randomized controlled trial.

Abstract

Background: Knee osteoarthritis (KOA) has often been linked to the deficiency of proprioception and balance impairment, which results in a functional limitation and the risk of falls. Proprioceptive exercise can possibly have better neuromuscular effects than conventional Physical Therapy Objective: This research aimed to compare the effects of proprioceptive exercises and traditional Physical Therapy on the balance among patients with KOA. Methods: It was a randomized controlled trial involving 40 subjects who had KOA (KL grades 23). The participants were randomly distributed in Proprioceptive Exercise Group (PEG; n=20), and Control Group (CG; n=20). These two groups were subjected to pulsed ultrasound treatment and then was subjected to structured proprioceptive exercises (PEG) or conventional Physical Therapy (CG) in a period of 10 weeks. The Berg balance Scale (BBS) was used to measure balance at Baseline, Week 4, Week 8 and Week 10. Repeated-measures ANOVA was carried out, as well as post-hoc tests. Results: Both groups had a similar baseline score, but the PEG showed significantly better improvements in balance at all follow up periods. Week 4 (PEG), Week 8 (PEG) and Week 10 (PEG) all showed a favorable mean difference (PEG). The significance of the overall between-group effect was high ( -0.56; 95% CI: -0.72 -0.40; p<0.001), and the interaction effect is large (F(1,38)=132.98; η²=0.823). The balance trend graph depicted sharper trend of improvement in PEG. Conclusion: Proprioceptive training resulted in much larger enhancement of balance in comparison to standard Physical Therapy, which is why they should be incorporated into the rehabilitation of KOA.

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Published

2025-10-29

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Section

Articles

How to Cite

1.
Muhammad Atif Khan, Satheesh Babu Natarajan, Muhammad Ahmed Azmi, Hira Islam, Muhammad Asif, Muhammad Danial Baig Chughtai. Comparative Analysis of Proprioceptive Exercises versus Conventional Physical Therapy Interventions on Balance among patients with Knee Osteoarthritis. JHWCR [Internet]. 2025 Oct. 29 [cited 2026 Feb. 25];3(15):e967. Available from: https://jhwcr.com/index.php/jhwcr/article/view/967

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