The worst thing you can do after you've been healing with a stress fracture is to re-injure the bone.
Obviously when that happens, you have a huge setback, you've just lost weeks of training, you're going to lose more fitness, and in some cases you might have to start over again with the fracture walking boot. You don't want to do that.
Today on the Doc On the Run Podcast, we're talking about why the “Hop Test” is the worst test for a runner with a stress fracture who thinks the metatarsal bone has healed enough to run.
Difference between MRI vs MRA in runner with ankle injury
2 Ways running shoes cause shin splints
2 reasons toe drifts sideways with plantar plate injury
3 Phases of ankle sprain recovery in runners
Doctor missed fracture on my X-rays
Calcaneal stress fracture in runners good news bad news
Broken toe can I compete in 4 weeks?
Orthopedic doctor said come back 4 weeks after fracture
Can I use a bone stimulator for a broken toe?
Medial calcaneal neuritis vs Baxter's neuritis in runners with heel pain
How dress shoes with long toe box act as a lever to stress plantar plate
Can a Cortisone injection as stop gap for plantar fasciitis in runner
Worse exercise for plantar plate when building uphill strength
How to patch test for tape allergy
What is hyperemia in medical imaging of shin splints?
When is fracture boot really needed with metatarsal stress fracture?
Overtraining injuries are caused by weakness
What is cortical thickening that precedes a stress fracture?
Why Stress Fracture Grading is BS for Runners
What is periosteal elevation in tibial stress reaction?
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