A partial rupture of the plantar fascia can be a truly debilitating injury for a runner.
It's much worse than plantar fasciitis. You take time off. It starts feel better. Then you run and it starts to feel worse again.
Because it can be so frustrating it becomes very easy to convince yourself that you need surgery.
In fact I was just having a conversation with an athlete who started to talk himself into surgery, even though he has absolutely no desire to have surgery one the plantar fascia.
His story highlights how easy it is to become frustrated, and how to overthink a mild setback in your recovery.
Today on the Doc On The Run podcast were talking about how a runner with a plantar fascia rupture talks himself into surgery
Workout while waiting to heal
How to add miles and speed at lower risk if running after injury
Can heel raises make insertional Achilles Tendinitis worse?
Can Ultrasound have a false positive for fracture?
How does callus show healing on non-displaced fractures?
Audit your stress level to avoid re-injury
Top 3 Mistakes Runners make with plantar fasciitis
Would collagen supplementation help an interstitial tear?
What size compression socks should I buy?
3 Signs runner has the wrong doctor
Intractable dubious metatarsalgia diagnosis
What is the sinus tarsi?
Biggest danger with popping a broken toe back in place (avascular necrosis)
Should a runner have surgery to shorten a long second metatarsal bone?
Can I still run after I heal a fibular stress fracture?
Fast & Easy vs. Fast & Cheap fracture imaging
Bone bruise for 10 months still not running
You cannot run early without data
Do bunions cause plantar plate sprain in runners?
Is returning pain normal when running after a healed stress fracture?
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