If you have a soft tissue injury in your foot related to overtraining, you (or your doctor) may be thinking about getting an MRI.
If you have a ligament injury, plantar plate sprain, partial tear of the plantar fascia, an Achilles tendon partial rupture, Achilles tendinosis, or peroneal tendinitis, the timing of the MRI is extremely important.
MRIs can be really useful tools. They give you over a hundred images of your foot. Because you have so many pictures, the detail can fool you into believing the MRI is a complete picture, but it is not.
When is an MRI most reliable for a soft tissue running injury?
Well, that's what we're talking about today on the Doc On The Run Podcast.
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
Do I have to use crutches for a fibula stress fracture?
Can MRI miss a plantar plate strain?
Single most effective but most neglected tool to run earlier after injury
Fibula stress reaction vs stress fracture what is the difference?
What does an elephant, a woman in high heels and a forefoot runner have in common?
4 main causes of lateral ankle pain in runners
Best imaging study for plantar plate injury in runners
Best test for a runner with ankle sprain
Fracture that seemed like a plantar plate sprain
How to rule out soft tissue vs. bone injury
Why does a Lister’s corn hurt when I run
How to tell soft tissue vs bone injury in a runner
Was the plantar plate ligament injured before my MRI?
Running injuries are like compounded interest in reverse
When to worry an ankle sprain is a Lateral Process Fracture
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