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.
The #1 question for a runner with a second stress fracture
When should I give in and have plantar plate surgery?
Reduce your risk of the #1 most common injury by 35%?
What do injured runners do that makes as much a sense as picking at a healing skin incision?
How much earlier than X-ray can ultrasound prove fracture healing?
What info would I give to a high school cross-country team?
What is a common cause of 5th metatarsal fracture in a trail runner?
Can the toenail grow back if the root of the nail is removed by biopsy?
When can I start running after metatarsal fracture if no healing on the x-ray?
When should I start working out with a plantar plate sprain?
Is it risky to run with cuboid fracture?
When can I run if my doctor says don’t run?
How likely is a setback if I run while stress fracture heals?
What can doctors do to relate to runners?
Can I let runners run in an ankle brace after an ankle sprain?
Workout while waiting to heal
How to add miles and speed at lower risk if running after injury
Can heel raises make insertional Achilles Tendinitis worse?
Can Ultrasound have a false positive for fracture?
How does callus show healing on non-displaced fractures?
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