The lower leg is an essential anatomical part of the skeletal system. It contains two major long bones, the tibia and fibula. The two bones consist a great amount of providing strength. The tibia is the shin bone, while the fibula is the rear calf bone that is significantly smaller.
When a lower stress fracture occurs, many of the muscles can fall victims to these tiny cracks. Including….
The most important treatment for a stress fracture is rest. The most important treatment is rest. Individuals need to rest from the activity that caused the stress fracture, and engage in a pain-free activity during the six to eight weeks it takes most stress fractures to heal. If the activity that caused the stress fracture is resumed too quickly, larger, harder-to-heal stress fractures can develop. Re-injury also could lead to problems where the stress fracture might never heal properly and leave the leg in a more severe state.
The toes on our foot are referred to as metatarsals. In this X-ray, there is a small amount of bone growth on the inside of the 3rd metatarsals. This is an example of a healing stress fracture. The bone growth surrounding the 2nd metatarsal on the X-ray, is in response to the break in the bone. The bone growth will recover into stabilizing the fracture.
Initially, stress fractures do not show up on the X-ray. It may take four weeks before signs of the broken bone show up on the X-ray. This is because the incomplete break is difficult to see and visualization of the fracture only occurs when bone healing shows up on the X-ray.