"Struggling to Walk with Knee Pain and Slow Recovery? Accelerate Rehabilitation with an Aquatic Treadmill for Low-Impact, Pain-Free Mobility Training"

"Struggling to Walk with Knee Pain and Slow Recovery? Accelerate Rehabilitation with an Aquatic Treadmill for Low-Impact, Pain-Free Mobility Training"
Health Article | KIN Rehabilitation

Underwater Treadmill Rehabilitation
Benefits, Safety and Who It May Suit

Aquatic treadmill training can be a useful rehabilitation option for selected people, but it does not guarantee faster recovery and must be matched to a clear goal and safety assessment.

Medically reviewed educational content|About 7 minutes|2026

Families often ask whether there is a safer or more comfortable way to practise movement. An underwater treadmill may provide graded support and resistance for selected goals. It should be considered one tool within rehabilitation—not a replacement for clinical assessment or land-based practice.

1. What is an underwater treadmill?

An underwater treadmill places a moving belt inside a temperature-controlled water chamber. Water depth, belt speed, hand support, session time and assistance can be adjusted to the individual. Swimming ability is usually not required, but the person must be able to enter, exit and exercise safely with the available staff and transfer equipment.

See the related aquatic rehabilitation service page.

2. How does water change exercise?

Buoyancy can reduce effective loading through the legs, while water resistance provides movement in several directions. Warm water may also improve comfort for some people. The effect depends on immersion depth, body position, speed, temperature and the person’s condition; it should not be expressed as one fixed percentage for everyone.

Potential advantages: graded weight-bearing, slower supported movement, resistance without external weights, and confidence to practise selected tasks.

Important limitation: water does not remove fall, fatigue, pain, cardiovascular or transfer risks, and skills practised in water still need to transfer to land.

3. Who may be considered?

Selected people with stroke, knee or hip osteoarthritis, reduced balance or endurance, obesity, sports injury, or recovery after surgery may be considered when the clinical goal can be practised safely in water. It is an option—not a requirement—and suitability is based on individual assessment.

Screen before pool use: recent surgery or an unhealed incision, open wounds or skin infection, fever or acute illness, uncontrolled urinary or faecal incontinence, unstable heart or lung disease, recent thromboembolism, uncontrolled seizures or blackouts, severe fear of water, and inability to transfer or stand safely with the equipment available. The surgeon’s restrictions must be followed after an operation.

4. How does it compare with land-based rehabilitation?

Aquatic and land-based exercise are not interchangeable. Land practice is essential for real walking surfaces, stairs, transfers and daily environments. Aquatic practice may make selected exercises more tolerable or provide a different training challenge. Research in stroke and osteoarthritis suggests possible benefits for balance, gait, pain or function, but studies are heterogeneous and do not prove that underwater treadmill therapy is superior for every outcome or every patient.

Best use: combine water-based sessions with goal-specific land practice, strengthening, endurance, education and a home programme when appropriate.

5. What outcomes should be measured?

A suitable programme does not promise that everyone will walk sooner. Progress should be measured against the starting point and the person’s goal.

Pain and tolerance: pain during and after exercise, swelling, fatigue, breathlessness and delayed symptom flare.

Mobility: walking speed or distance, assistance required, balance, transfers, step quality or ability to exercise for longer.

Function: stairs, self-care, community mobility, return to sport or a specific post-operative milestone.

The number of sessions cannot be predicted from diagnosis alone. A short trial with predefined goals and review criteria is safer than guaranteeing improvement within four to eight weeks.

6. How a supervised programme should be planned

1. Assessment before entry Confirm diagnosis, goal, medical stability, wound and skin status, continence, seizure history, cardiovascular and respiratory tolerance, transfer method and emergency plan.

2. Individual settings Set water depth, belt speed, hand support, assistance, temperature, duration and rest periods according to symptoms and performance.

3. Skilled monitoring A qualified rehabilitation professional should monitor movement quality, pain, fatigue, dizziness, breathing, skin and response after the session.

4. Link to real-life goals Combine the programme with physical therapy, stroke rehabilitation or a condition-specific land programme.

7. When to stop and seek review

Stop the session and alert the therapist for chest pain, faintness, unusual breathlessness, palpitations, new neurological symptoms, severe or increasing pain, wound leakage, bleeding, marked skin reaction or inability to continue safely. Sudden facial droop, one-sided weakness, speech difficulty or severe imbalance requires Thailand EMS 1669.

“A useful aquatic session is not defined by being in water; it is defined by a clear goal, safe access, skilled supervision and measurable transfer to daily life.”

KIN Rehabilitation & Homecare

K
KIN Rehabilitation Clinical Review Team
Educational content reviewed for rehabilitation safety and evidence-based claims.
Note: This article provides general health information and does not replace individual medical or rehabilitation assessment. Eligibility for pool or underwater treadmill exercise depends on diagnosis, wound status, medical stability, transfer safety and facility resources.

Contact the KIN rehabilitation team

Add LINE or call to confirm current services, assessment steps and fees

Ladprao 71

Nak Niwat Soi 18

084-993-6988

Frequently asked questions

About underwater treadmill and aquatic rehabilitation

Do I need to know how to swim?+
Usually no, because the exercise is walking on a belt rather than swimming. However, safe entry, exit, standing, communication and emergency support must be confirmed.
Can I start immediately after knee surgery?+
Not automatically. The surgeon’s restrictions, wound closure, infection risk, swelling, weight-bearing status and safe pool access must be reviewed before entering the water.
Is it safe after stroke?+
It may be suitable for selected medically stable people after assessment of balance, cognition, communication, seizures, continence, skin, cardiovascular status and transfers. It is not safe for every stroke survivor.
Does the water eliminate fall risk?+
No. Buoyancy and the enclosure may support movement, but slips, fatigue, loss of balance, blood-pressure changes and transfer incidents can still occur.
How many sessions are needed?+
There is no universal number. Set a measurable goal, complete a trial period and review pain, tolerance, walking, balance or function before continuing.
Is it better than land-based therapy?+
Not for every person or outcome. It may be a useful adjunct, but land practice remains necessary for daily walking, stairs, transfers and community environments.
Can it help knee osteoarthritis?+
Aquatic exercise can provide small to moderate short-term benefits in pain and function for some people with osteoarthritis. It should be part of an individual therapeutic exercise plan.
What should I bring to the assessment?+
Bring the diagnosis, operation date if relevant, surgeon or physician restrictions, medicine list, wound information, mobility aids and details of seizures, heart, lung, skin or continence problems.
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