A clinical PT course that tells you exactly what is wrong with your knee, whether you need to see a doctor, and gives you a step-by-step rehab program you can do at home — starting today.
Designed by a 30-year orthopedic PT
Evidence-based exercises with video demos
Differentiates PFS, sprain/strain, and ACL/meniscus red flags
Instant access · Self-paced · Printable HEP
This course is for educational purposes only. It does not replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If you are experiencing severe pain, significant swelling, or loss of function, seek in-person evaluation before beginning any exercise program.
Mills Cooper, PT
Licensed Physical Therapist · Texas License #1085991 30 Years Orthopedic Experience · Former BSW Clinician
Instant access · No subscription · One-time payment
Not sure? Upgrade to a Zoom eval anytime — $29 applies toward session cost.
What's Inside
Five Modules. One Clear Path Forward.
No filler. No generic advice. Each module builds on the last — from understanding what is actually happening in your knee to a progressive exercise program designed for your specific pattern.
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Module 1: Understand Your Knee
Anatomy explained simply, how pain patterns work, and what different symptoms actually mean.
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Module 2: Identify Your Pattern
A structured self-screening tool that differentiates PFS, soft tissue sprain/strain, and structural red flags (ACL, meniscus).
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Module 3: Red Flag Screening
Know exactly which symptoms require in-person evaluation or imaging — and which ones are safe to manage yourself.
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Module 4: Your Exercise Program
A progressive 4-phase HEP with video demonstrations for every exercise. Adapted to your diagnosis pattern.
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Module 5: Progress & Return to Activity
How to track improvement, when to advance, and how to return to sport or work safely.
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Upsell: Live PT Session
Add a 45-min Zoom evaluation or in-person session with Mills. Your $29 applies as credit toward the session cost.
Medical Disclosure & Disclaimer — Please Read
This course is created and authored by Vector Physical Therapy, PLLC (licensed physical therapist, Texas). It is intended for educational and informational purposes only. The content does not constitute, and is not a substitute for, professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment by a licensed healthcare provider. Purchasing or using this course does not establish a physical therapist–patient relationship.
Stop and seek immediate medical attention if you experience: sudden severe swelling, inability to bear weight, knee that gives way or locks, numbness or tingling, or any symptom that is rapidly worsening. This course is not appropriate for post-surgical patients — please see our Post-Surgical Rehab course or book an in-person evaluation.
Individual results vary. This program works best for mild-to-moderate knee pain without significant structural injury. When in doubt, book a session — your $29 purchase applies as credit.
Course Modules
0 of 5 complete
1
Understand Your Knee
Anatomy · Pain science · 8 min
2
Identify Your Pattern
Self-screening · Diagnosis guide · 10 min
3
Red Flag Screening
Safety check · When to see a doctor · 6 min
4
Your Exercise Program
10 exercises · Video demos · 20 min
5
Progress & Return to Activity
Milestones · Troubleshooting · 8 min
Your Progress
Modules Complete0 / 5
Exercises Learned0
Est. Time Left52 min
Need More Help?
Upgrade to a 45-min Zoom or in-person session with Mills. Your $29 course purchase applies as credit.
Before you can fix your knee pain, you need to understand what is actually happening inside it. Most people are told to "rest and ice" — which misses the point entirely. This module gives you the clinical picture in plain English.
Why Knee Pain Is Rarely Simple
Your knee is one of the most loaded joints in your body — it handles 3 to 5 times your body weight with every step. What most people call "knee pain" is actually several completely different conditions that look similar from the outside but have very different causes, timelines, and treatments.
The three most common presentations we see in orthopedic PT are: Patellofemoral Pain Syndrome (PFS), which is pain behind or around the kneecap related to how the kneecap tracks; soft tissue sprain/strain, which is injury to ligaments or muscle tissue around the knee; and structural injury to the ACL or meniscus, which usually requires clinical evaluation and may need imaging or surgery.
By the end of Module 2, you will know which category fits your situation — and what that means for your recovery timeline and exercise program.
Four key structures drive most knee pain: the patella (kneecap) and its tendon — overuse here causes PFS and patellar tendinopathy. The medial and lateral collateral ligaments — sprained by sideways forces. The ACL and PCL — rotational and high-force injuries. And the medial and lateral menisci — the shock-absorbing cartilage discs that can tear with twisting under load.
Why "Rest and Ice" Often Fails
The standard advice — rest, ice, take ibuprofen, wait — works fine for minor acute injuries. But for most knee pain that has persisted longer than a few days, rest alone does not address the underlying cause. Patellofemoral pain, for example, is driven by muscle imbalance — weak quads and hip stabilizers that cause the kneecap to track improperly. No amount of rest fixes that. Only targeted loading does.
The Clinical Principle
Tissue that is not progressively loaded does not remodel or strengthen. In most cases, the answer to knee pain is not less movement — it is the right movement, at the right load, in the right sequence.
Answer the following questions honestly. Your responses will guide you to the right exercise program and tell you whether in-person evaluation is recommended before you begin loading.
Step 1 — Location of Your Pain
Step 2 — How and When It Hurts
Step 3 — Structural Red Flag Screening
These symptoms suggest possible structural injury (ACL, meniscus). Be honest — this determines whether self-management is appropriate for you.
One or more of your responses suggest possible ACL, meniscus, or significant ligament involvement. Please have an in-person clinical evaluation before beginning a self-directed exercise program. A PT can perform specific orthopedic tests to clarify the diagnosis. Do not advance to Module 4 until evaluated.
Book a session with Mills — your $29 course cost applies toward the evaluation fee.
✓ Pattern Consistent with Patellofemoral Pain Syndrome (PFS)
Your pattern — front-of-knee pain, worse with stairs and prolonged sitting, gradual onset — is consistent with PFS, the most common cause of knee pain in active adults. This is highly responsive to the right exercise program. Modules 4 and 5 are designed for your pattern. No structural red flags identified — proceed to Module 3.
✓ Pattern Consistent with Soft Tissue Sprain / Strain
Your pattern is consistent with a mild soft tissue injury — ligament sprain or muscle strain — without structural red flags. PRICE principles (Protection, Rest, Ice, Compression, Elevation) apply early. Your exercise program in Module 4 begins with low-load activation and progresses as pain allows.
⚠️ Pattern Unclear — Evaluation Recommended Before Starting Exercises
Your symptom pattern does not clearly fit one category. We recommend a clinical evaluation to clarify before beginning a loading program. You can continue through Modules 3, 4, and 5 for education — but hold off on loading exercises until assessed.
Module 3 of 5
Red Flag Screening
This module teaches you to recognize the symptoms that mean "stop and see a doctor now." Being wrong in this direction is never the safe choice. These are clinical standards — not excessive caution.
When Self-Management Is NOT Appropriate
Seek immediate medical attention if you have:
Inability to straighten or bend the knee past 90 degrees · Significant joint effusion (swelling inside the joint, not just around it) · Fever with joint pain · Rapid unexplained onset without injury · History of cancer or recent significant trauma · Sudden severe swelling within 1 hour of injury (hemarthrosis — blood in the joint)
The Ottawa Knee Rules
The Ottawa Knee Rules are a validated clinical tool used in emergency medicine to determine whether X-ray is needed after a knee injury. If any of the following are present, imaging is recommended before beginning a rehab program:
Age 55 or older
Tenderness at the head of the fibula (outer lower leg, just below knee)
Isolated tenderness at the kneecap
Unable to flex the knee to 90 degrees
Unable to bear weight immediately after injury and in the clinic
If Any Ottawa Criteria Apply to You
Please visit urgent care or your physician before beginning the exercise program in Module 4. This course is still valuable — it will prepare you for your evaluation and your rehab once cleared.
Quiz — Test Your Understanding
A patient reports knee pain after a fall during basketball. They heard a pop, the knee swelled up significantly within an hour, and they cannot bear weight. What is the appropriate next step?
Safe to Self-Manage — Green Light Criteria
You are appropriate for this self-directed program if all of the following are true:
No giving way, locking, or buckling of the knee
No pop at time of injury, OR injury was more than 6 weeks ago and already evaluated
Able to bear full weight on the leg
Pain level at rest is 5/10 or below
No fever, no history of cancer affecting bones or joints
Module 4 of 5
Your Exercise Program
Ten evidence-based exercises, organized into four progressive phases. Start at Phase 1 regardless of how much pain you are in. Expand each exercise to read the technique cues and watch the demonstration.
How to Use This Program
Perform Phase 1 exercises daily for the first week. Add Phase 2 when you can complete Phase 1 with pain of 3/10 or less during the exercise. Never push into sharp or sudden pain. A dull ache during exercise is acceptable. Pain that worsens significantly after exercise means you progressed too fast — drop back one phase.
Phase 1 — Activation & Neuromuscular Control
Goal: Re-establish quad and hip activation without joint load. Pain should stay at 3/10 or below throughout.
1
Quad Sets — Isometric
3 sets · 15 reps · 10-sec hold · Daily
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Video Coming Soon
Vector PT demonstration video will be added here
Instructions
Lie flat on your back. Place a rolled towel under your knee.
Tighten your thigh muscle by pressing the back of your knee toward the floor. Squeeze hard.
Hold for 10 full seconds. Breathe normally throughout.
Release slowly. Rest 5 seconds. Repeat.
Coaching Cues
No kneecap painThigh muscle onlyHold full 10 secBreathe normally
Mills can review your exercise technique, confirm your diagnosis, and adjust your program in a 45-minute session. Your $29 course purchase applies toward the session cost — so you only pay the difference.
Knowing when to advance, when to back off, and when you are truly ready to return to sport or work — this is where most self-managed programs fall apart. This module gives you the clinical milestones.
How to Measure Your Progress
Do not rely on pain alone. Pain fluctuates. Use these objective markers instead:
Phase 1 → Phase 2: Complete Phase 1 with pain ≤ 3/10 during exercise and no increase next morning
Phase 2 → Phase 3: Step-down with good knee tracking, pain ≤ 3/10, 10 reps per leg
Phase 3 → Return to Activity: Single-leg squat with good alignment, no swelling after exercise, pain ≤ 2/10
Return to Running Protocol
Do not return to running until you can walk 30 minutes pain-free and complete Phase 2 without pain increase. Then use this progressive return:
Run-Walk Protocol
Week 1: Walk 4 min, jog 1 min × 6. If pain stays below 3/10, continue.
Week 2: Walk 3 min, jog 2 min × 6.
Week 3: Walk 2 min, jog 3 min × 6.
Week 4: Walk 1 min, jog 4 min × 6. Progress to continuous running.
Rule: If pain exceeds 3/10 during a session, stop and repeat the previous week.
When Your Program Isn't Working
If pain is not improving after 3 to 4 weeks of consistent effort, or if you have any of the following, schedule an evaluation:
Book an Evaluation If:
Pain consistently above 5/10 during exercise · Swelling increases with activity · Sharp pain with any of the Phase 1 exercises · No improvement after 4 weeks of consistent program · Symptoms change in character — spreading, different quality, or new areas
Maintain Your Gains
Once you are pain-free, you are not done. Patellofemoral pain recurs in 50% of people who stop their maintenance program. After completing the full program, continue Phase 3 exercises 2 times per week permanently as part of your training. Your hips and quads need ongoing work to keep the kneecap tracking correctly.
You now have a clinical understanding of your knee pain, a validated red flag screen, and a full progressive exercise program. Most people see meaningful improvement within 3 to 4 weeks of consistent effort.
Next Step — Optional
Ready to go further?
If you want expert guidance on your specific presentation, a telehealth or in-person session with Mills gives you personalized program adjustments, technique feedback, and a clear timeline. Your $29 applies as credit.