

Embark on a journey to stronger, pain-free knees with our expert knee rehabilitation programs. Our physios are specialise in the management of ACL injuries, sporting injuries and knee osteoarthritis.They also conducts research and educate and lecture in collaboration with Bond University. From post-surgery recovery to managing chronic conditions, our experienced physiotherapists tailor comprehensive rehabilitation plans to rebuild strength, improve mobility, and enhance the stability of your knees.

Adam Walker, a passionate physiotherapist and director at Gold Coast Knee Group, focuses on knee pain and injury rehabilitation...

Hardy Sattler is a distinguished Titled APA Sports and Exercise Physiotherapist and Honorary Adjunct Assistant Professor...

Adrian Kan, a Physiotherapist with a Doctor of Physiotherapy degree and a Bsc (Hons) in Sport & Exercise Science, has a special interest
in...

Graham started as a strength and conditioning coach working with various collegiate and professional athletes. He spends
his ...

From Vancouver, Canada, Kendal played collegiate basketball where she
experienced an ACL injury giving her insight into the rehabilitation process. ...

Matt is a Physiotherapist with a background in Human Kinetics. Born and raised in Canada, Matt grew up playing competitive ice hockey and baseball...

There’s a moment after surgery that almost everyone remembers.
You’re told it went well. You’re cleared to start rehab.
But your knee (or shoulder, or ankle) doesn’t quite agree.
It’s stiff. Swollen. Heavy. Even simple movements feel awkward, like your body has forgotten how to move properly.
And somewhere in the back of your mind, there’s that quiet hesitation:
“Am I going to make this worse?”
That’s often where hydrotherapy quietly changes things.
Hydrotherapy isn’t just about making rehab easier, it actually changes what your body is capable of early on.
When you’re in the water, your body weight is partially supported. At chest depth, you might only be loading 30–40% of your body weight.
For a post-surgical joint, that’s huge.
It means you can start:
Walking sooner
Bending the joint more comfortably
Reintroducing functional movements earlier
…without the same compressive stress you’d feel on land.
Hydrostatic pressure, the gentle compression from the water, helps move fluid out of the joint and back into circulation.
Patients often notice:
Less “tightness” around the joint
Improved range of motion within a single session
A general sense that movement feels less threatening
And that last one matters more than we sometimes acknowledge. Because when movement feels safer, people move more.
After surgery, your body adapts quickly, often in ways we don’t want.
You might:
Limp
Shift weight away from the surgical side
Avoid bending or loading properly
Water gives you a chance to reset that. Because the load is reduced, you can practise normal walking and movement patterns earlier without compensating as much.
It’s not just about moving… it’s about moving well, from the start.
Water provides resistance in every direction. It’s not aggressive or jerkym, it’s smooth, constant, and adapts to how hard you push.
That means you can start rebuilding:
Quadriceps strength
Hip stability
Balance and control
…without overloading healing tissue.
And importantly, without that post-session flare-up that sometimes happens with early land-based work.
A good example of where hydrotherapy really fits is after a knee replacement.
This is a stage where people are often caught between two realities:
They need to move to regain range and strength
But movement is still painful, stiff, and fatiguing
That tension can slow progress — or lead to frustration early on.
This is where the pool becomes incredibly valuable.
In the pool, you can:
Practise walking with a more natural gait (without full body weight)
Gently work on knee bending and straightening
Rebuild confidence with movement
Often, people who feel “stuck” on land suddenly realise they can move more freely.
This might include:
Sit-to-stand patterns in water
Step work and balance drills
Controlled strengthening against water resistance
Because the environment is more forgiving, you can do more, without irritating the joint.
But by this point:
Range of motion is better
Strength has improved
Movement patterns are more natural
So the transition feels smoother, not like starting over again.
Research supports this progression too. Hydrotherapy has been shown to reduce pain, improve joint movement, and enhance muscle activation, often with greater effect than land-based exercise alone in early stages.
But beyond the data, there’s something that shows up again and again in real rehab:
People move differently when they feel safe. And water helps create that.
Post-surgical rehab isn’t just about doing the right exercises. It’s about doing them at the right time, in the right environment.
Hydrotherapy gives you a way to start earlier, without forcing things. To rebuild movement without constantly pushing through pain. mAnd to regain confidence in your body, one session at a time.
Because once that confidence comes back… progress tends to follow.
Have a question?
Bond Institute of Health and Sport Robina, (Next to Cbus Super Stadium) Ground Level, 2 Promethean Way, Gold Coast, QLD, 4226