Chronic knee arthritis has a sneaky way of shrinking your life. You may stop taking long walks, skip workouts, or turn down hobbies you used to love because the pain just isn’t worth it. The point of Genicular Artery Embolization, or GAE, isn’t only to lower pain on a chart. It’s to help you move comfortably again in real life—walking through your day, exercising without fear, and enjoying the activities that make you feel like yourself.
GAE is designed to reduce the inflammation that drives osteoarthritis pain. Because it’s minimally invasive, recovery is usually much easier than a major surgery. There are no large incisions and no months-long rehab schedule. Instead, the focus is a steady return to normal movement, with your comfort guiding the pace.
Most people feel some mild soreness or a bruised feeling in the knee for the first day or two. That’s expected, and it typically responds well to simple pain relief and rest. This early window is about giving your knee space to settle. You’ll likely be able to get up, walk around the house, and handle basic daily tasks, but it’s smart to keep things light and let your body lead.
A helpful way to think about it is “easy movement, not training.” Short walks around the home, gentle shifting instead of long periods of sitting, and avoiding anything that spikes discomfort are usually the right moves early on.
After the initial rest period, light movement becomes your ally. Staying completely still can make a knee feel stiff and guarded. Gentle walking helps keep your joint loose, encourages healthy circulation, and rebuilds confidence in how the knee feels.
Some people benefit from a few physical therapy visits after GAE, not because GAE requires intense rehab, but because guidance can help you regain strength safely. If therapy is recommended, it is usually simple and supportive—think mobility, stability, and gradual strength instead of aggressive rebuilding.
As inflammation calms, you can increase activity in stages. Most patients do best when they treat recovery like a small ramp, not a leap.
During the first couple of weeks, walking is usually the main focus. You build distance and time little by little, paying attention to how the knee responds the next day. If walking feels easier and swelling stays down, low-impact exercise often becomes the next step. Activities like cycling, swimming, or elliptical work tend to be knee-friendly because they strengthen without pounding the joint.
Over the next month or two, many patients can return to more demanding routines, especially if their arthritis wasn’t end-stage. The key is consistency, not speed. If something causes sharp pain or lingering swelling, it’s a sign to back off and try again later with a gentler approach.
One of the most rewarding parts of GAE recovery is how quickly everyday life begins to feel manageable again. Many people notice that normal walking, errands, and household tasks feel easier within the first week. For some, it’s the simple wins that matter most: going up stairs without bracing, walking a parking lot without limping, or standing long enough to cook a meal without needing to sit down halfway through.
Hobbies are where recovery feels personal. Whether you love golf, gardening, hiking, dancing, or chasing grandkids around the yard, the point is to make these things enjoyable again. As pain drops and movement feels more natural, you can start easing back into the activities you’ve avoided. Many patients find that once inflammation is down, they don’t just move more—they move with less hesitation.
GAE helps by calming the source of inflammatory pain, but your long-term success still depends on how you care for your knee afterward. A good rule is “discomfort is information.” If your knee feels tired but settles quickly, that’s normal. If pain spikes or lingers, that’s your body asking for a slower pace. Recovery isn’t a race. It’s a rebuilding of trust between you and your knee.
Everyone’s timeline is a little different, but many people feel noticeable improvement within the first month, followed by a steady climb back into activity. Because GAE targets inflammation, the benefits often support long-term movement—especially when paired with strengthening, healthy weight support if needed, and low-impact habits you can sustain.
GAE is a promising option for people who want pain relief without the long recovery of major surgery. But the procedure is only the first step. The real win is what happens after: walking more freely, exercising with confidence, and enjoying your daily life without constantly negotiating with your knee. With gentle progression and attention to your body’s signals, many patients find they can return to the activities they love and stay there. Request an appointment with us today!
Many patients can drive again within a few days, once they feel steady on the leg and are no longer taking pain medication that affects alertness. Your doctor will confirm what’s right for you.
Not always. Some people recover well on their own with gradual walking and low-impact activity. Others benefit from a few sessions to improve strength, mobility, and confidence.
People with desk jobs often go back within a day or two. If your job is physical, you may need more time and a slower return depending on how the knee feels.
Many patients start walking right away and build up over the first two weeks. Low-impact exercise often returns within two to four weeks, and more intense activity may follow after one to two months if your knee tolerates it well.
Heavy lifting, high-impact workouts, and long periods of standing are usually best avoided for about a week. If something causes sharp pain or swelling, pause and scale back.