If your symptoms point to a foot or ankle fracture, the most essential step is to schedule an examination at Mill Creek Foot & Ankle Clinic. Joseph Hall, DPM, offers comprehensive care for a broken foot and ankle bones. If a severe fracture needs surgical repair, you can depend on the expertise of Dr. Hall, who’s board-certified in foot, rear foot, and ankle surgery for over 25 years. Don’t wait to get help for a potential fracture. Call Dr. Joseph Hall, DPM (Foot and Ankle Specialist) at Mill Creek Foot & Ankle Clinic in Mill Creek, WA or request an appointment online today. We have same day appointments available!
You can break any of the bones in your foot and ankle:
Ankle fractures involve a break in the tibia, fibula (the leg bones that comprise the ankle joint), or talus (the bone between the heel and leg bones).
These fractures involve the toes and the bones connecting the toes to the bones in the middle of your foot.
The midfoot refers to the small bones over the top of the arch.
The heel (calcaneus) is so strong that it takes a high-energy event to cause a fracture. These fractures are severe and usually require surgery.
Foot and ankle fractures are often caused by:
If you don’t rest between repetitive athletic activities, you're at risk of developing a stress fracture.
Stress fractures develop when you frequently repeat the same movement, and the stress causes a tiny crack in the bone.
Without rest, the small crack can become a complete bone fracture. Running often causes stress fractures, but the force of walking and jumping can also lead to stress fractures.
Broken bones cause one or more of the following symptoms:
Stress fracture symptoms develop slowly, causing pain that improves with rest and worsens during activities.
While a stress fracture heals, you must change your activities and wear a brace, protective footwear, or cast.
Broken bones must be immobilized while the fracture heals. If the ends of the bones are aligned and close together, Dr. Joseph Hall immobilizes them with a cast or walking boot.
However, if the bones are displaced (out of alignment), your provider must realign them either perform a closed reduction of the bones to get them in better alignment or perform a surgery using rods, plates, and screws to hold the bones in place during healing. This procedure is called an open reduction internal fixation (ORIF) procedure.
Closed reduction requires numbing the affected area with a locan anesthetic and then Dr. Joseph Hall can manually re-align the bones placing them in the proper orientation to allow successful healing.
At the first sign of a fracture, call Dr. Hall at Mill Creek Foot & Ankle Clinic or request an appointment online.