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Osgood-Schlatter Disease – Bromley Sports Injury Clinic

Key Points

  • Osgood-Schlatter Disease is the most common cause of knee pain in children and adolescents, especially during growth spurts.

  • It occurs at the tibial tuberosity (just below the kneecap), where the patellar tendon attaches to the shinbone.

  • At Bromley Sports Injury Clinic we use diagnostic ultrasound to assess the patellar tendon, growth plate, and surrounding soft tissues — ensuring an accurate diagnosis and ruling out other causes of knee pain.

  • We then provide tailored rehabilitation and guidance to support safe sport participation.

👉 Related: Anterior Knee Pain | Patellar Tendinitis (Jumper’s Knee) | Shin Splints

What is Osgood-Schlatter Disease?

Osgood-Schlatter is an overuse-related growth plate condition affecting the bony prominence at the top of the shinbone.

  • The patellar tendon repeatedly pulls on this growth plate during running, jumping, or kicking.

  • This leads to pain, swelling, and sometimes a visible bony lump.

  • Ultrasound helps confirm whether the cause is growth plate irritation, patellar tendon thickening, or a differential diagnosis (such as patellar tendinitis or bursitis).

Symptoms of Osgood-Schlatter Disease

  • Pain and tenderness just below the kneecap

  • Swelling or a bony lump at the tibial tuberosity

  • Pain that worsens with running, jumping, stairs, or kneeling

  • Usually affects one knee, but can be present in both

  • May cause a prominent lump that remains after growth finishes

Causes & Risk Factors

  • Adolescents aged 10–15 during growth spurts

  • High activity levels in sports (football, rugby, gymnastics, basketball)

  • Tight quadriceps and hamstrings pulling on the growth plate

  • Rapid increases in training load without adequate recovery

  • More common in active boys, but increasingly recognised in girls

Why Diagnostic Ultrasound Matters

Knee pain in young athletes can come from several different sources. Clinical exam alone can be uncertain.

With ultrasound, we can:

  • Visualise the patellar tendon where it inserts into the tibial tuberosity

  • Detect growth plate inflammation or fragmentation

  • Differentiate Osgood-Schlatter from:

    • Patellar tendinitis (jumper’s knee)

    • Bursitis

    • Small avulsion fractures

    • Other paediatric knee conditions

  • Monitor tendon and bone changes during recovery

👉 This gives parents and young athletes clarity, reassurance, and tailored rehab guidance.

Diagnosis of Osgood-Schlatter Disease

At Bromley Sports Injury Clinic, diagnosis includes:

  • Osteopathic assessment – posture, flexibility, activity load

  • Diagnostic ultrasound – to confirm tendon and growth plate involvement, and exclude other conditions

  • Referral – X-ray or orthopaedic review if symptoms are severe or persistent

Self-Help for Osgood-Schlatter Disease

  • Modify activity levels (reduce running/jumping temporarily)

  • Apply ice packs after sport to ease pain and swelling

  • Gentle stretching of quadriceps and hamstrings

  • Use of knee pads if kneeling is unavoidable

  • Patellar tendon straps or taping to reduce strain

  • Avoid complete rest — relative rest is best to allow safe continuation of activity

Treatment Options at Bromley Sports Injury Clinic

✅ Osteopathic care – soft tissue release and joint mobility to reduce tension on the knee
✅ Exercise rehabilitation – stretching and strengthening to balance quads/hamstrings
✅ Sports massage – reducing tightness in thigh muscles
✅ Ultrasound imaging – confirm diagnosis, monitor recovery, and rule out other knee conditions
✅ Training advice – safe return-to-sport progression plans

Prevention

  • Gradual progression of training load

  • Regular flexibility work during growth spurts

  • Proper warm-up before sport

  • Supportive footwear for high-impact activities

  • Balanced training with scheduled rest days

FAQs – Osgood-Schlatter Disease

Q: Can ultrasound confirm Osgood-Schlatter?
Yes. It shows changes at the tendon insertion and growth plate, confirming diagnosis and ruling out alternatives.

Q: Does it go away on its own?
Yes. Symptoms usually resolve once growth slows, but a bony lump may remain.

Q: Can my child keep playing sport?
Often yes, with load modification and proper rehab. Total rest is rarely necessary.

Q: Does it cause long-term damage?
No. Once growth is complete, symptoms usually disappear. The bony prominence may remain without pain.

Book Your Appointment

Don’t let knee pain stop your child enjoying sport. Book an Osgood-Schlatter ultrasound assessment in Bromley today for clear diagnosis and tailored rehab.

📍 Bromley Sports Injury Clinic | Same-week appointments available

Reviewed by: Geoff Gardener, Registered Osteopath (GOsC 8289) — Director, Bromley Sports Injury Clinic
Credentials: Osteopath · ECG Technician · Advanced DSE Assessor · Manual Handling Trainer · Phlebotomist
Regulatory information: CQC Provider — Colmore Health Limited (ID: 1-18387136912)
Last medically reviewed: 03 October 2025
Next review due: 03 April 2026
About Geoff · Editorial Policy · Report an issue

Clinical content is written and peer-reviewed by our clinicians. Care pathways may include musculoskeletal ultrasound, rehabilitation, blood tests, or onward referral where appropriate.

Bromley Sports Injury Clinic is a trading name of Colmore Health Limited, a company registered in England and Wales (Company No.10522958), registered with the Care Quality Commission (CQC) and the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO).

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