For patients with severe arthritis, recent joint replacement, obesity-related joint pain, or any condition where land-based exercise feels impossible, aquatic therapy can be a game-changer. Water reduces effective body weight by up to 90% — making movement possible when gravity makes it unbearable.

The Physics of Why Water Works

Aquatic therapy leverages four physical properties of water that no land-based treatment can replicate:

Buoyancy

Water counteracts gravity, reducing compressive forces on joints. Submerged to the chest, effective body weight drops by ~75%. Submerged to the waist, ~50%. This allows movement that would be impossible or agonizing on land.

Hydrostatic Pressure

Water exerts pressure equally in all directions, reducing swelling and improving venous return. This decreases joint effusion (excess fluid) and reduces pain — a therapeutic effect that begins the moment you enter the water.

Viscosity (Resistance)

Water provides 12× more resistance than air. This means every movement builds strength without the impact. The resistance is also self-regulating — move faster for more resistance, slower for less.

Thermodynamics

Warm water (typically 92–96°F in therapeutic pools) relaxes muscle spasm, increases soft tissue extensibility, and reduces pain sensitivity — making movement easier and less threatening.

90%
reduction in effective body weight when submerged to the neck — enabling exercise for patients who cannot bear weight on land

Conditions Aquatic Therapy Treats Most Effectively

While almost any musculoskeletal condition can benefit from aquatic therapy, it is especially powerful for:

ConditionWhy Aquatic Therapy HelpsEvidence Level
Osteoarthritis (knee, hip)Reduces joint load; allows strengthening without pain flareStrong (Cochrane Review)
Rheumatoid ArthritisWarm water reduces joint stiffness; hydrostatic pressure reduces swellingStrong
Total Knee / Hip ReplacementEarly mobility in buoyant environment; reduces fear of weight-bearingStrong
FibromyalgiaWarm water desensitizes the nervous system; full-body low-impact exerciseStrong
Chronic Low Back PainBuoyancy deloads lumbar spine; core activation with reduced painModerate
Obesity-related joint painAllows aerobic exercise without joint damage from excess loadStrong
Neurological (MS, stroke, Parkinson's)Improved balance, reduced fall risk, motor relearning in safe environmentModerate
Post-fracture rehabilitationPartial weight-bearing progression before full weight-bearingModerate

Aquatic Therapy for Arthritis: What the Research Shows

Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most common joint condition in the world, affecting over 32 million Americans. The Tri-Cities region, with an older average population than the national median, has particularly high OA prevalence — especially in the knee and hip.

A 2019 Cochrane review of 13 high-quality trials found that aquatic exercise for hip and knee OA:

Crucially, aquatic therapy is not a replacement for land-based rehabilitation — it's a bridge. Most patients graduate from aquatic to land-based programs as their strength and pain tolerance improve.

The transition matters: The goal of aquatic therapy is always to build enough strength and confidence to tolerate progressively more land-based loading. Water is the starting point, not the endpoint, of rehabilitation.

Aquatic Therapy After Joint Replacement

Post-surgical aquatic therapy has transformed early recovery after total knee and hip replacement. Once surgical wounds are fully healed (typically 6–8 weeks), patients can begin pool-based therapy that:

Research shows patients who incorporate aquatic therapy into post-TKR rehabilitation achieve full weight-bearing and functional independence an average of 2–3 weeks earlier than land-only programs.

What an Aquatic Therapy Session Looks Like

1
Warm-Up (5–10 min)

Gentle walking in the pool, water arm circles, hip mobility work. The warm water and hydrostatic pressure begin reducing joint stiffness immediately.

2
Therapeutic Exercises (25–35 min)

Targeted exercises for your specific condition — squats, side steps, heel raises, leg swings, balance work. Resistance increased via water speed, flotation noodles, or aquatic resistance equipment.

3
Functional Movement Practice (10 min)

Gait training, stair-stepping practice, directional changes. Builds neuromuscular control in a safe, supported environment.

4
Cool-Down & Land Transition (10 min)

Gentle stretching in water, then graduated weight-bearing transition back to land. Your therapist monitors for any post-session pain response.

Who Is the Best Candidate for Aquatic Therapy?

Aquatic therapy is ideal for patients who:

Contraindications include open wounds, skin infections, uncontrolled urinary incontinence, severe cardiovascular instability, or fear of water that cannot be overcome with gradual exposure.

Could Aquatic Therapy Be Right for You?

Book a free assessment at EverStrong Physical Therapy in Kingsport. We'll evaluate whether aquatic or land-based PT — or a combination — is best for your condition.

Book Free Assessment (423) 367-7670

Frequently Asked Questions

No. Aquatic therapy is performed in shallow water (chest-deep or waist-deep) with the therapist present at all times. Swimming ability is not required. The exercises are performed standing, walking, or using flotation devices — never in deep water without support.

Aquatic therapy is supervised physical therapy performed in water using structured therapeutic exercises — not recreational swimming. A licensed physical therapist designs and monitors each session, targeting specific impairments like strength, range of motion, balance, and pain reduction. The water's properties are used therapeutically in ways that recreational swimming cannot replicate.

Many major insurance plans, including Medicare Part B, cover aquatic therapy when it is prescribed as part of a physical therapy plan of care. Coverage depends on your specific plan and medical necessity. Contact EverStrong at (423) 367-7670 to verify your benefits before beginning aquatic therapy.

JC
Dr. James Carter, DPT
Doctor of Physical Therapy · 14 Years Experience · Manual Therapy & Rehabilitation Specialist

Dr. Carter has extensive experience integrating aquatic therapy into comprehensive rehabilitation programs for arthritis, post-surgical recovery, and chronic joint conditions. He brings 14 years of clinical expertise to every patient at EverStrong Physical Therapy in Kingsport, TN.