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.
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?
Does a split peroneal tendon always require surgery in runners?
Maintaining running fitness while injured is a delicate dance
3 basic steps to straighten a crooked broken toe
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