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Would The Pain From An Arthritic Knee Be Felt At The Back Of The Leg?

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sandyRoe | 14:35 Wed 28th Jan 2015 | Body & Soul
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This is someone who is suffering considerable hip pain. The hip and knee aren't on the same limb.
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What a complicated question and i am not sure that i have got the gist of it, but here goes:

It is unusual, very unusual, but not impossible for the pain of knee arthritis to radiate down the back of the leg.

It is common, very common for pain of osteo-arthritis of the hip to give pain in the knee.

Pain from either knee or hip, will not radiate to the opposite limb.

Have I addressed your query?
Question Author
Sorry Sqad, I should have made my Q clearer. Some time ago she declined a hip replacement operation, right hip, and now this new pain has started behind her left knee.
I really wanted to know if someone had an arthritic knee where would they feel the pain?
Ah! got it!

The pain behind her knee is probably coming from the knee, rather than the hip.
Question Author
TY.
when troubles come they come not single spies...
LOl..LOL...sorry....I have re-read your posts again.

The pain in her LEFT knee is not coming from her RIGHT hip and is probably coming from her Left knee.
I can speak from experience as I am in a similar boat. The pain in my right knee (on the inside of my knee) is so bad that I am currently going around on crutches. If I don't use my crutches I hobble so much that a pain appears in my left hip and is unbearable and has had me on the floor a few times .
Could it be a Baker's cyst, which can be treated ?
Is there any chance of the patient being convinced o have the hip op?

If she is older and/or over-weight then her situation is not going to get any better. I know that you know that but does she know that?


I agree with chaptaz - it sounds like a Baker's cyst.

http://www.patient.co.uk/health/bakers-cyst-leaflet
Baker's Cyst is a ..cyst.....a swelling.
As far as I can see, there is no mention of a swelling in the thread......so far.
Question Author
There's no swelling. I'd have guessed that when someone has a hip problem they've reached a stage in their lives where similar troubles can occur in other joints.
A lot of knee pain that comes with age and is assumed to be arthritis isn't arthritis at all.

It is caused by strain on the knee ligaments due to withering of the muscles that hold the knee together.

The knee evolved from the fins of lobe-finned fish. Worked fine in the water but the structure is unsound as a leg articulation. (If they were designed by God then He would have failed Engineering 1.01).

The pain tends to make the sufferer exercise even less and the problem gets worse. In the case of your friend the hip arthritis may be limiting their exercise and weakening the muscles around the knee.
Stabbing pains in my knee were the first, early signs that I would, a couple of years later, have to have a hip replacement. Then it took a while to hone down because the pain referred itself into my back and I had back, rather than hip, X-rays. I suppose knee problems could also refer themselves to another bit. My stepson has the same knee pains I had - I've told him to book his hip replacement early!
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