Yesterday, I was doing a consultation with an athlete who broke one of her toes when she accidentally kicked a piece of furniture.
If you fracture your toe, and you just run and ignore it, it can turn into a painful nonunion (non-healed fracture).
As a runner, you want to speed the healing as much as possible. One of the ways to stimulate fracture healing is with a thing called a bone stimulator.
This particular athlete actually happened to already have a bone stimulator. Her question was pretty obvious:
“Can I just use that bone stimulator for this broken toe since it's a different kind of fracture?”
Well, that's what we're talking about today on the doc on the run podcast.
When is an MRI most reliable for a soft-tissue running injury?
Advice for flat footed runner with plantar plate injury started on a treadmill
Can I wear softer shoes when running a custom orthotic?
When is an MRI most reliable for a bone running injury?
Find the one thing that causes the most pain
How your running shoe insert can show risk of metatarsal stress fracture
Your identity needs to be that of a recovering runner
Is stretching safe with a calcaneal stress fracture?
MRI essentials for runners, slice size matters
How ankle stiffness can lead to another stress fractures in a runner
I rolled my ankle and foot hurts here. What is it?
MRI essentials for Runners, T1 vs T2 images
Injured runners need a Goal Race
How to get access to an Alter-G treadmill
Your brain is your adversary when you first start running
Value of getting an MRI on both feet
3 variables you can modify when you run after injury
You got injured because you were too weak
Lacing running shoes with bursitis from tailor’s bunion
The longer you wait the more pain you can expect when you run
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