If you roll your ankle on a trail run and it turns black and blue and swollen, you may think you just have to take a few days off.
In fact, if you research how long it will take to get back to running, you might find a study that says that if you do early range of motion after an ankle sprain, it only takes 4 days to get back to pre-injury levels of activity.
However, if you do that, you can wind up with a lot of trouble later.
When I lecture at medical conferences on how doctors should treat ankle sprains in runners, I teach 3 phases of ankle sprain injury recovery.
If you are a runner with an ankle sprain, and you understand them, it'll help you get back to training and running without another ankle sprain.
What are the three phases of ankle sprain recovery in runners?
Well, that's what we're talking about today on the Doc On The Run Podcast.
Is plantar fascia really a ligament?
3 ways a doctor convinces you you need plantar plate surgery
When can you resume pushups with hallux rigidus?
The 3 problems (not 2) solved by boot and crutches
Plantar plate surgery is a failure to act quickly
How self judgment may be slowing your injury recovery
Chronic stress reaction versus acute on chronic stress reaction in a runner
Radiologist and Orthopedic doctor disagree on my stress fracture diagnosis
Difference between MRI vs MRA in runner with ankle injury
2 Ways running shoes cause shin splints
2 reasons toe drifts sideways with plantar plate injury
Doctor missed fracture on my X-rays
Calcaneal stress fracture in runners good news bad news
Broken toe can I compete in 4 weeks?
Orthopedic doctor said come back 4 weeks after fracture
Can I use a bone stimulator for a broken toe?
Medial calcaneal neuritis vs Baxter's neuritis in runners with heel pain
How dress shoes with long toe box act as a lever to stress plantar plate
Can a Cortisone injection as stop gap for plantar fasciitis in runner
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