Hydrotherapy and Aquatic Treadmills
How They May Help and Who Needs Caution
A practical guide to water-based rehabilitation after stroke or surgery and for osteoarthritis, including screening before pool entry.
Hydrotherapy and aquatic treadmills are adjuncts that may allow selected people to practise movement with lower effective limb loading. They are not superior to land therapy in every case and do not guarantee results.
Pool entry requires screening of medical stability, wounds, infection, continence, safe access and clear goals, with transfer of gains back to land activity.
1. What hydrotherapy and an aquatic treadmill are
Aquatic therapy uses the water environment within a rehabilitation programme. A suitably trained therapist selects water depth, temperature, speed, movements and assistance according to goals. An aquatic treadmill controls walking speed in water, but it is not “zero impact” and is not suitable for everyone.
Buoyancy
Water resistance
Hydrostatic pressure
Temperature
2. How an aquatic treadmill differs from pool walking
Controlled speed
Adjustable water depth
Observation of gait
Water does not replace real life
3. Evidence after stroke
Some studies suggest aquatic training may improve balance, gait speed or mobility in selected people after stroke, particularly when combined with land rehabilitation. Evidence quality and effect size vary, so outcomes should not be guaranteed and aquatic work should not replace needs-based stroke rehabilitation.
Use a clear target
Spasticity
Communication and safety
Transfer gains to land
4. When it may be used after surgery or for osteoarthritis
Water may reduce loading and make permitted range or walking more comfortable, but the surgeon’s weight-bearing, wound and tissue-healing restrictions remain essential. Entering water too early can increase infection risk or violate precautions.
The wound must be ready
Do not promise adhesion prevention
Pain and swelling
After spine surgery
5. Who may be suitable and who needs extra screening
Potential candidates
Heart and lung conditions
Wounds and infection
Bowel control and gastrointestinal illness
Seizure, cognition and water anxiety
Water entry and exit
6. Pool and service safety
Water quality
Infection prevention
Staff and rescue
Privacy and changing
7. Combining water and land rehabilitation
8. Questions before booking
- Who assesses and supervises in the water?
- Which goal is best trained in water and which must be trained on land?
- Are there cardiac, respiratory, wound, infection or continence concerns?
- How will the person enter and leave the water, and is the required transfer equipment available?
- Does this branch currently have a pool or aquatic treadmill and on which days?
- What are the assessment, session, assistant and excluded-item fees?
Related KIN information
The source states that an aquatic treadmill is offered at Ladprao and hydrotherapy at Sukhumvit 107, but current services, equipment, staffing, transfer methods and schedules can change. Confirm directly before travelling and see rehabilitation medicine and physical therapy information.
Key principle
Use aquatic rehabilitation when water clearly supports a defined goal. Screen health and water access first, measure real-world function and combine with land practice. Do not guarantee effects on gait, spasticity, pain, swelling or recovery for every person.
Consult our team
Confirm which branch currently provides a therapy pool or aquatic treadmill, the schedule, water access, transfer equipment and fees before booking.
Related information and services
Frequently asked questions
About suitability, pain, swimming, surgical wounds, stroke and choosing a facility



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