# Manual therapy improves pain and walking function in geriatric knee osteoarthritis via proprioceptive mediation

**Authors:** Bowen Zhu, Sipeng Huang, Shuaipan Zhang, Qingguang Zhu, Min Fang

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpain.2026.1749582 · Frontiers in Pain Research · 2026-02-26

## TL;DR

Manual therapy reduces pain and improves walking in elderly patients with knee osteoarthritis by enhancing proprioception and muscle balance.

## Contribution

This study identifies proprioceptive mediation as a key mechanism through which manual therapy improves walking function in geriatric knee osteoarthritis.

## Key findings

- Manual therapy significantly reduced pain scores in geriatric knee osteoarthritis patients.
- Proprioceptive sensitivity restoration accounted for 69.59% of the functional improvement from manual therapy.
- Manual therapy improved walking distance and reduced limb asymmetry in proprioceptive force sense.

## Abstract

To evaluate the therapeutic effects of manual therapy (MT) on pain, walking function, proprioception, and lower-limb muscle strength in geriatric patients with knee osteoarthritis (KOA), and to explore potential biomechanical mechanisms.

In this prospective non-randomized controlled trial, 25 geriatric participants with unilateral mild-to-moderate KOA (intervention group) and 25 matched healthy controls were enrolled. The intervention group underwent a 4-week MT, while the control group received no intervention. The primary outcome was change in Western Ontario and McMaster Universities osteoarthritis index (WOMAC) pain subscale score. Secondary outcomes included 6-minute walk test (6-MWT) distance, proprioceptive force sense (PFS), and maximal isometric lower-limb strength. Causal mediation analysis was employed to investigate mechanistic pathways linking pain modulation to functional recovery.

Following MT intervention, the intervention group demonstrated significant reductions in WOMAC pain scores (13.04 ± 4.39 vs. 5.36 ± 2.40; P < 0.001), increased 6-MWT distance [320.44 m [95% CI: 283.68–357.20] vs. 612.28 m [95% CI: 594.42–630.14]; P < 0.001], and diminished inter limb asymmetry in PFS (54.52 ± 19.35 N vs. 15.92 ± 11.00 N; P < 0.05). Mediation analysis revealed that restoration of proprioceptive sensitivity accounted for 69.59% of the total effect through which pain reduction enhanced ambulatory capacity. Muscle strength profiling further indicated that functional improvement was potentially mediated by neuromuscular rebalancing of bilateral agonist-antagonist coordination.

MT delivers significant short-term clinical benefits for elderly patients with unilateral mild-to-moderate KOA (Kellgren-Lawrence grades 0–2), including effective pain relief and improved walking ability, potentially through restoring proprioceptive sensitivity and modulating intermuscular balance.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** asymmetry (MESH:D005146), osteoarthritis (MESH:D010003), KOA (MESH:D020370), pain (MESH:D010146)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

25 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12979429/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12979429