Whenever I speak to a runner who wants to know if they can run with a bone bruise, I get confused. If you were "diagnosed" with a bone bruise, you should be confused, too.
A bruise is a very simple thing. You fall down and land on your knee and you get a bruise. You get a bruise because your kneecap crushes the skin against the ground and you get bleeding in the skin that you see as discoloration that we call a bruise.
You can't see that in a bone. When you get diagnosed with a bone bruise, you have to think of it in terms of bone injury, like a stress fracture. The continuum of bone injury includes stress response, stress reaction and stress fractures.
You have to understand the severity of the bone injury before you can decide whether or not to run.
What is the difference between a bone bruise and a stress reaction in a runner?
Well, that's what we're talking about today on the Doc On The Run Podcast.
Methodical testing is the key to running after injury
Scared of re-injury after trying to build strength
After healing a stress fracture should I use Alter-G after I start running outside?
Are you using a treadmill for returning to running after an injury?
When are x-rays useful for runners with Morton’s neuroma?
Best way to file toenails for marathon runners
When is plantar fascia surgery necessary for runners?
Ankle pain vs sinus tarsi impingement when running
Does the plantar plate need to “heal” on MRI before I can run?
How long should I use crutches?
Plantar wart treatment options in runners
FHL tenosynovitis PRP injection vs. Cortisone injection
How pneumonia made my Kona dream come true
What is subungual melanoma?
FHL Tenosynovitis vs Sesmoiditis
697 Hallux rigidus shoe traits for runners
Work out now or do more workouts later
Most important tibial stress fracture detail is location
Andrea ran 3:09 in the Tokyo Marathon with calcaneal stress fracture!
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