Musculoskeletal knee case involving patellofemoral pain syndrome, occupational overuse, activity modification, exercise progression, psychosocial stressors, and ethical support.
Review the full written case in a table-style format before attempting the oral questions.
| Client Profile | |||
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| Client Name | Mr. Rahul S. | Practice Setting | Outpatient / occupational MSK physiotherapy context |
| Age | 34 years | Primary Concern | Gradual-onset anterior knee pain consistent with PFPS. |
| Gender | Male | Occupation | Warehouse worker requiring frequent lifting, stair climbing, prolonged standing, and walking. |
| Psychosocial / Contextual Factors | |||
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| CPTE oral cue: Link the patient’s financial pressure, work demands, stair exposure, limited coverage, and high motivation to your education, treatment planning, and ethical reasoning. | |||
| History / Mechanism of Injury | |||
| Mr. Rahul presents with a 4-month history of gradual-onset anterior knee pain with no specific traumatic event. He denies episodes of locking, catching, or giving way, and reports no acute injury. His symptoms have progressively worsened over time and are associated with repetitive occupational demands. | |||
| Presenting Complaint | |||
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| Pain Characteristics | |||
| Intensity | At rest: 2–3/10 With aggravating activities: 6–7/10 |
Type of Pain | Diffuse, aching anterior knee pain. |
| Aggravating Factors | Stair ascent/descent, prolonged sitting, repetitive lifting, and squatting. | Relieving Factors | Rest and activity modification. |
| Objective Assessment | |||
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| Candidate focus: This is not an acute traumatic knee case. Use the absence of locking, catching, giving way, swelling, effusion, and laxity to support your differential reasoning. | |||
| Clinical Impression Prompt | |||
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What is your clinical impression for this patient?
Summarize the likely diagnosis, key supporting subjective and objective findings, relevant differential considerations, and the functional or psychosocial factors that may influence physiotherapy management. |
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Reveal Clinical Impression AnswerMr. Rahul S. is a 34-year-old warehouse worker presenting with a 4-month history of insidious-onset anterior knee pain. This presentation is consistent with a chronic overuse condition rather than an acute traumatic injury. His pain is dull and aching around the patella and is aggravated by activities that increase patellofemoral joint compressive forces, including stair negotiation, prolonged sitting, squatting, repetitive lifting, and carrying tasks required at work. The absence of mechanical symptoms such as locking, catching, or giving way, along with the lack of joint effusion or ligamentous laxity on examination, makes intra-articular pathology such as meniscal tear or ligament injury less likely. Reproduction of symptoms with the patellar compression test supports involvement of the patellofemoral joint as the primary pain generator. Management should also account for psychosocial factors, including financial responsibility, pressure to continue working, limited insurance coverage, and high stair exposure at home. |
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1.A List three exercises that would be appropriate to improve symptoms of Patellofemoral Pain Syndrome.
1.B Describe how these exercises should be progressed safely to support functional recovery.
2.A Identify three workplace or activity modifications that could help reduce knee stress for this patient.
2.B Explain how each modification helps to minimize patellofemoral loading and prevent symptom aggravation.
Scenario: The patient is the sole financial provider and primary caregiver for a mother with dementia.
3.A Identify three ethical or psychosocial concerns present in this scenario related to caregiving, work demands, and the patient’s injury.
Practice realistic Canadian physiotherapy oral scenarios with structured clinical reasoning, ethics, patient education, workplace modification, and case discussion.
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