ExploreCME: Diving deep into PANCE Prep!

Ankle Injuries, Made Clinically Simple

Subscriber Episode Phillip

This episode is only available to subscribers.

ExploreCME: Diving deep into PANCE Prep! +

Get access to our entire back catalogue

Why Ankle Injuries Get Missed

SPEAKER_02

Welcome to the deep dive, where we take complex, high-stakes medical source material and uh really just transform it into immediate, actionable clinical wisdom. Today we are tackling one of the most common, but I think also one of the most frequently mismanaged presentations out there: ankle injuries.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, absolutely.

SPEAKER_02

Our mission is pure clinical clarity to give you the tools to just rapidly triage and manage the whole spectrum, from a mild sprain to something, you know, career-ending.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell And it's the ultimate high yield topic, right? For anyone prepping for boards or even just heading into a busy clinic.

SPEAKER_01

Right.

SPEAKER_00

The critical skill here isn't just knowing the common sprain.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

It's being able to quickly spot the three or four diagnoses that look like a simple sprain, but need completely different, often surgical management.

Mechanism Drives The Diagnosis

SPEAKER_02

Aaron Powell Okay, let's unpack this. We need a foolproof strategy for that clinical decision making. So we're starting at the very beginning. Differentiating that garden variety inversion injury from, say, the much trickier, unstable high ankle sprain or a critical fracture. So when a patient comes in, they've rolled their ankle, the mechanism of injury is usually the biggest giveaway, right?

SPEAKER_00

It's everything. 90% of the time, you're looking at a combination of plantar flexion and inversion.

SPEAKER_02

The classic roll.

SPEAKER_00

That classic mechanism directs all of your attention to the lateral ligament complex. The force vectors mean the anterior telofibular ligament, the ATFL, is always the first to go. It's the weakest. Right. And if the force continues, then the calcaneofibular ligament, the CFL, gets recruited. And there you have it, your typical straightforward lateral ankle sprain.

SPEAKER_02

But the second that mechanism changes, you have to just shift your entire differential.

SPEAKER_00

Entirely.

SPEAKER_02

So what history should immediately make us think, okay, this is a high ankle sprain, a syndismotic injury? Trevor Burrus, Jr.

Red Flags And Achilles Rupture Clues

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, the game changes when the force involves external rotation and aversion. So instead of the foot rolling in, it's forced outward. This puts a massive torque on the tibia and fibula, stressing the anterior tibiofibular ligament. That's your syndismosis. The patient might say their foot got twisted out, or you know, in sports, they got tackled while their foot was planted.

SPEAKER_02

And beyond the twist, we need to immediately screen for red flags. Things that hint at something much more severe than a ligament tear.

SPEAKER_00

Absolutely critical. When you're taking the history, two questions are just non-negotiable. First, you have to ask about immediate weight bearing.

SPEAKER_01

Right.

SPEAKER_00

If they genuinely could not put weight on it, I mean immediately after the injury, that's a huge red flag for a potential fracture. It triggers imaging right away.

SPEAKER_02

And the second question.

SPEAKER_00

You have to ask about a sudden severe event, like a tendon rupture.

SPEAKER_02

You're talking about the Achilles here.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. The classic history for an Achilles rupture is unforgettable. It's a sudden audible pop, and they feel like they were kicked or even shot in the back of the ankle. It usually happens during stop and go sports, basketball, tennis. You hear that history, the Achilles has to become your primary focus instantly.

SPEAKER_02

Aaron Ross Powell So moving to the physical exam, we start by looking, you know, checking for swelling, bruising, deformity. But the real triage skill comes from targeted palpation.

Targeted Palpation And Proximal Fibula Check

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Palpation is where you apply the audible rules before you even think about an x-ray. You're feeling for maximal tenderness on the bone. Is the posterior tip of the lateral malleolus, the medial malleolus, or is it at the base of the fifth metatarsal?

SPEAKER_02

Okay.

SPEAKER_00

If you find bony tenderness at any of those specific spots, you meet the criteria for an x-ray.

SPEAKER_02

That fifth metatarsal check is so crucial and so easy to forget if you're only focused on the joint itself. It also brings up the importance of uh following the entire fibula up proximally.

SPEAKER_00

That is the ultimate clinical trip-up. When you have a severe external rotation force distally, that energy can travel all the way up the leg. You must palpate the proximal fibula to rule out a meson of fracture. This is a fracture way up high that tells you there's a severe unstable injury down low. The syndismosis is probably blown out. If you miss that high fracture, you miss the need for surgery.

SPEAKER_02

Here's where it gets really interesting. Confirming the laments are intact with special tests. We need to go beyond just tenderness and actually check for laxity.

Laxity Tests For Lateral Sprains

SPEAKER_00

Right. For the common lateral sprain, you need the anterior jaw test for the ATFL. You stabilize the leg, you try to pull the heel forward.

SPEAKER_01

And a positive test isn't just movement, right?

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. It's increased movement compared to the other side. But the most important finding is a soft, lost endpoint. You just feel the joint gap open without that firm stop you'd expect.

SPEAKER_01

Okay. And the tallar tilt test?

SPEAKER_00

The talar tilt checks the CFL. You stress the joint into inversion. It's positive if there's more than, say, 10 degrees of inversion compared to the uninjured side. It tells you there's significant instability.

Tests For High Ankle Sprains

SPEAKER_02

Aaron Powell So what about those tests for the high ankle sprain, the ones that really differentiate it?

SPEAKER_00

Two main ones. The external rotation stress test. You stabilize the tibia, you externally rotate the foot. If that reproduces their pain right over that anterior tibiofibular ligament, that's a huge clue.

SPEAKER_01

And the other one?

SPEAKER_00

The squeeze test. You compress the tibia and fibula together at mid-calf. That compression actually forces them apart distally, and it causes this deep distal pain right at the syndismosis.

SPEAKER_02

And just to wrap up the exam, if we heard that pop in the history, the Thompson test is mandatory.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, absolutely non-negotiable. Squeeze the calf. If the foot fails to plant our flex, the Achilles tendon is ruptured. It's a binary test, and it means an immediate orthopedic consult.

SPEAKER_02

So that detailed exam should lead us right to the decision tree for imaging. And that brings us to the Ottawa ankle rules. For pants prep, this is just a classic triage skill.

SPEAKER_00

They're critical, not just for an exam, but for good practice. They are so sensitive, they rule out something like 86 to 99% of fractures.

SPEAKER_02

So we're saving patients money and unnecessary radiation.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. You only image if they meet the criteria. Pain in the malleolar zone A and D, that specific bone tenderness we talked about, malleoli, fifth metatarsal or R, the inability to bear weight for four steps.

SPEAKER_02

And just to clarify that for everyone listening, inability to bear weight means both immediately after the injury and not being able to take four steps right there in your clinic.

SPEAKER_00

That's the one. If they meet those rules, you order your standard views, AP, lateral, and the oblique, which we call the mortise view.

SPEAKER_02

So why is that mortise view so important, especially for these high ankle sprains?

SPEAKER_00

The mortise view gives you the absolute best look at the integrity of the whole ankle joint. In a normal ankle, the tibia and fibula overlap just a little bit. Okay. If the syndesmosis is disrupted, you'll see a telltale widening of that joint space. Yeah. There'll be a clear loss of that normal overlap. That finding is catastrophic. It means the ankle is unstable and it almost always needs surgery.

SPEAKER_02

And if that initial x-ray is negative, but the patient still has this persistent severe pain that just isn't getting better.

MRI For Persistent Pain

SPEAKER_00

Correct. That's when you graduate to advanced imaging. That's the domain of the MRI. MRI is just superior for soft tissue. It's the best tool for seeing ligament tears, confirming how bad a syndesmotic injury is, and really importantly, finding any of those hidden cartilage defects that can cause chronic pain long after the sprain should have healed.

SPEAKER_02

So before we jump to diagnoses, let's quickly lock down the West Point ankle sprain greeting system because this really dictates our initial management.

SPEAKER_00

It's a spectrum. Grade one is just a ligament stretch. You know, minimal swelling, they can fully bear weight. Grade two is a partial tear, moderate swelling, weight bearing is tough, but possible.

SPEAKER_02

And grade three is the big word.

SPEAKER_00

Grade three is the complete tear. Diffuse swelling, definite instability on your exam, and weight bearing is impossible. We use this grading to decide how aggressive to be with rehab.

SPEAKER_02

So the primary diagnostic challenge, as we've been saying, is just accurate differentiation.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. If you have clear lateral pain and swelling and your anterior drawer and tollar tilt tests are positive for laxity, you've nailed it. That's the classic inversion ankle sprain.

SPEAKER_02

But the clinical hazard is confusing the two. Why do high ankle sprains get missed so often? And what's the definitive way to lock in that diagnosis?

Fracture Patterns You Cannot Miss

SPEAKER_00

They're missed because the tenderness can overlap a bit, or the provider just does the tests for the lateral ligaments and stops there. The definitive clue is the pain location and the mechanism. The pain is severe, it's prolonged, and it's located anteriorly and superiorly on the ankle. It's higher up than the ATFL.

SPEAKER_02

And you have to confirm it with those specific tests.

SPEAKER_00

You must. Pain with external rotation or the squeeze test. If those are positive, you have a high ankle sprain, and you know right away the recovery is going to be much, much longer.

SPEAKER_02

Now let's focus on the fractures that are highly associated with these mechanisms, the ones that are high yield for an exam.

SPEAKER_00

We have three key players. So let's start at the base of the fifth metatarsal. If the patient has a lateral sprain and that area is tender, you have to differentiate an avulsion fracture from a jones fracture.

SPEAKER_02

How do we tell them apart, and why does it matter so much?

SPEAKER_00

The evulsion fracture is the less severe one. It's at the tuberosity, the very base, caused by their peroneus brevis tendon pulling a chip of bone off during inversion. It usually heals well. Okay. The Jones fracture. That's the one that gives us nightmares. It's further down the bone at the metaphysis diaphysis junction. And that area is a vascular watershed zone, meaning the blood supply is just notoriously bad.

SPEAKER_02

So it's not just a tough fracture to heal, it's prone to complications.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. Because of that poor blood supply, the jones fracture has a high rate of non-union. It often needs surgery. Even if you manage it conservatively at first, it demands immediate non-weight bearing.

SPEAKER_01

And finally, let's circle back to that highest risk fracture, the mesa neuve.

SPEAKER_00

The mesonuve fracture is that proximal spiral fibular fracture. And remember, the fracture itself isn't the main problem, it's a marker.

SPEAKER_02

A sign of bigger trouble down below.

SPEAKER_00

It tells you the rotational force was severe enough to tear the syndismosis or the deltoid ligament. Finding that high fibular tenderness means you must assume a major unstable ankle injury until you prove otherwise.

SPEAKER_02

Moving to management, the acute standard of care for pretty much any soft tissue injury is well, you know, modified activity, ice compression, elevation. But the treatment just radically diverges depending on the diagnosis.

SPEAKER_00

It does. And the biggest clinical difference you need to know is the mobilization strategy. For standard grade one to three inversion sprains, the evidence is overwhelming for early functional rehabilitation.

SPEAKER_01

You want to get them moving.

SPEAKER_00

You want to get them moving. Gentle motion, weight bearing as soon as pain allows, it speeds up recovery and gets them back to sport faster.

SPEAKER_02

But the high ankle sprain completely flips that advice on its head.

SPEAKER_00

Completely. Because the syndismosis gives critical stability. Treating it like a normal sprain is a recipe for chronic instability. A high ankle sprain needs much more conservative treatment. Strict immobilization. A cast or a walking boot with limited weight bearing for four to six weeks.

SPEAKER_02

Four to six weeks? That's a long time.

SPEAKER_00

That prolonged protected healing is essential.

SPEAKER_02

And what are our marching orders for fracture management?

SPEAKER_00

Stable distal fibular fractures can often be managed with a weight-bearing cast or brace for four to six weeks. But that dangerous Jones fracture, because of the non-union risk, needs a non-weight-bearing short leg cast for six to eight weeks, and often a prompt orthoreferral for possible fixation.

SPEAKER_02

So which conditions mandate an immediate surgical referral?

Medications, Tendons, And Safety

SPEAKER_00

Any unstable or displaced fractures, any widening of the joint space on X-ray, a confirmed Achilles rupture, or cases of recurrent chronic instability that just fail non-operative management.

SPEAKER_02

On the topic of tendons, there's a critical clinical warning about medications.

SPEAKER_00

This is a massive patient safety issue. If you're dealing with Achilles tendinopathy, corticosteroid injections are generally contraindicated.

SPEAKER_01

Right.

SPEAKER_00

Injecting a steroid into or even near the Achilles tendon significantly increases the risk of rupture. It weakens the very structure you're trying to heal.

SPEAKER_02

Okay, let's pivot to pain management. What's the go-to for acute pain in the first few days?

SPEAKER_00

NSAIDs, ibuprofen, neproxin. They're excellent for pain and for the initial swelling. Interestingly, though, for just pain reduction in the first 72 hours, studies show opioids and acetamenophen give pretty similar results.

SPEAKER_02

We also have a drug class alert that's uh crucial knowledge here.

SPEAKER_00

You have to screen for this. Oral fluoroquinolones, common antibiotics for UTIs, respiratory infections, they carry a known risk of increasing tendinitis and tendon rupture.

SPEAKER_01

Wow.

SPEAKER_00

So if your patient has a concurrent infection, you need to make sure they're not on a fluoroquinolone if they have a tendon issue.

SPEAKER_02

And uh final point open fractures always need systemic antibiotics to prevent a devastating bone infection.

Rehab, Proprioception, And Prevention

SPEAKER_00

We've addressed the acute phase, the treatment. So what does this all mean for long-term success, for recovery and preventing this from happening all over again?

SPEAKER_02

This is maybe the most important part for long-term health. The cornerstone of rehab for any ankle injury, even a simple grade one sprain, has to be a focus on proprioception and balance exercises.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell And why is proprioception so much more important than just, say, strengthening the muscles around the ankle? Because when you tear a ligament, you don't just lose mechanical support, you disrupt the neural sensors in that ligament that tell your brain where your ankle is in space.

SPEAKER_02

So it's a communication problem.

SPEAKER_00

It's a communication problem. That's proprioception. Things like wobble boards or single-leg stance exercises. They literally retrain the brain to coordinate muscle firing quickly enough to stop that mechanical failure from happening again.

SPEAKER_02

And what's the prognosis? How common is recurrence?

SPEAKER_00

Well, high ankle sprains definitely have a much longer recovery time, often double or triple the symbol inversion sprain. And unfortunately, chronic instability, meaning persistent symptoms, repeated injuries, it develops in up to 20% of acute ankle sprains.

SPEAKER_01

20%. That's one in five.

SPEAKER_00

It's high enough that it has to inform how we educate patients. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_02

So, what's the strongest evidence-based advice we can give for prevention?

SPEAKER_00

The data is strong. It's a combination of ongoing neuromuscular training, those proprioception exercises, and for high-risk sports, external support like bracing or taping. Yeah. That commitment is what separates the patient who heals once from the one who keeps coming back.

Key Takeaways And Big Picture

SPEAKER_02

Aaron Powell This was a truly comprehensive deep dive. I think our key takeaways are really clear. Mechanism dictates your diagnosis inversion, points you lateral external rotation, points to the unstable syndismosis. Use the strict criteria of the Ottawa rules to safely triage fractures. And remember that the recovery timeline for a high ankle sprain is exponentially longer. Four to six weeks of protection is mandatory.

SPEAKER_00

And if we just connect this to the bigger picture to leave you with a final thought, consider this. The ligament is just tissue, but the brain is the ultimate stabilizer. Yeah. When you prescribe proprioceptive training, you aren't just building muscle, you are repairing the neurological circuit board. So if you focus on retraining the nervous system's ability to coordinate movement, you fundamentally change that patient's long term prognosis. You ensure that one anatomical failure doesn't become a career long disability.

SPEAKER_02

We'll catch you on the next deep dive.