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Stress Fracture of the lower leg
Where can stress fractures occur? The two bones of the lower leg are called the tibia and fibula. The tibia is the larger of the two and its role is load bearing. The fibula is the smaller of the two and its role is mainly for muscle attachment. Either of these bones can have stress fractures. The most common site however is two to three inches above the bony bit on the inside of the ankle (medial malleolus) on the tibia bone.
Symptoms include:
- Pain (usually on the lower third of the tibia) that occurs after running long distances.
- Tenderness and swelling over the site of the fracture.
- Pain when you press into the shin. An X ray of the injured leg will often not show any sign of a fracture. Another X ray must be taken 4 weeks after the first and often the new bone can be seen where it has started to heal.
What might cause a stress fracture?
What can the athlete do about it?
- Rest for around eight weeks.
- See a doctor to have an X ray. The X ray should eventually show the healing bone and the doctor can then say when it is safe to resume normal training.
- Analyse the training that caused the fracture in the first place and avoid it in the future.
- Maintain fitness by swimming, running in the water or weight training.
- Do special exercises for the lower leg to maintain muscle strength whilst unable to run.
What can a sports injury specialist or doctor do?
- X ray the leg and advise on when it is safe to resume training.
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