Do You Need an MRI for Knee Pain in Singapore?
At The Pain Relief Clinic, MRI is not used routinely for knee pain. It is only recommended when clinical findings suggest that imaging will change diagnosis or treatment.
When an MRI is Likely Needed
- Persistent knee pain despite structured rehabilitation
- Suspected meniscus or ligament injury
- Swelling with mechanical symptoms (locking, catching, instability)
- Unclear diagnosis after clinical assessment and basic imaging
When MRI May Not Be Needed
- Mild or moderate knee pain improving with exercise-based rehabilitation
- Overuse or biomechanical pain without structural red flags
- Early knee arthritis managed conservatively
Why MRI Is Not Always the First Step
Many MRI findings (such as meniscus degeneration or cartilage wear) are common even in people without pain. Treatment decisions should be based on symptoms and function, not imaging alone.
Our Approach
We follow a structured pathway:
Assessment → Movement Analysis → Selective Imaging (if needed) → Diagnosis → Exercise-Based Rehabilitation
Key Principle
MRI is useful when it changes management—not simply to confirm that something looks abnormal.
Our MRI Decision Philosophy
MRI is used only when it is likely to change diagnosis or treatment. The goal is to ensure imaging supports clinical decision-making—not replace it.
- Movement and function guide treatment decisions
- Imaging is supportive, not primary
- Rehabilitation remains the core treatment
What To Expect When I Visit The Pain Relief Clinic
A typical visit will involve our doctor first understanding your medical history, concerns and previous experience with other pain treatments.
For patients who have consulted many people but have yet to receive a clear diagnosis, selecting an affordable imaging scan might be recommended to confirm the cause of your pain..
Some patients have already done scans with other doctors for their pain condition but are still not clearly told what they suffer from.
Dr Terence Tan is happy to offer you a second opinion and recommend how best to manage your condition.
We also see patients who already have a confirmed diagnosis from specialist pain doctors, but are "stuck” because treatment options offered are not practical or acceptable.
We can help by discussing options that you might have potentially never been told of.
A common experience is when a patient has already consulted a specialist doctor for pain management and is told to consider orthopaedic surgery which they find too aggressive.
Or they may have seen doctors for their pain and were prescribed painkillers with potential side effects which made them feel uncomfortable.
Many of our patients have also first tried complementary treatments or acupuncture with traditional Chinese pain doctors.
They look for a second opinion after finding any relief experienced from other treatments to be temporary or requiring repetitive treatments, which add up to time and cost.
Especially in such situations, we emphasize using non-invasive medical technology you likely have not been told about .
This can make a big difference to your results.



