Overview
what it is and why it mattersA high ankle sprain is a tear of the ligaments that hold the two lower-leg bones (the tibia and fibula) together just above the ankle — the syndesmosis. This is different from the much more common lateral ankle sprain, which involves the ligaments on the outside of the ankle below the joint. High ankle sprains usually happen when the foot is forcefully twisted outward or pushed up. They take significantly longer to heal than regular ankle sprains, and unstable ones often need surgery.
They're most common in American football, rugby, and ice hockey. An associated fracture higher up the fibula (called a Maisonneuve fracture) always has to be ruled out — the same twisting force can break the bone several inches above the ankle.
Symptoms
what you may noticePain sits higher than a regular ankle sprain — above the ankle joint, along the front and outside of the lower leg between the two shin bones. Walking is significantly more painful than with a standard lateral sprain, and the swelling often appears higher up the leg rather than around the ankle bone. Pushing off or rotating the foot outward typically reproduces the pain.
Unlike a lateral ankle sprain, which often feels better within a week or two, a high ankle sprain lingers. Many athletes describe a deep ache that worsens when they try to cut or pivot. If the syndesmosis is unstable — meaning the gap between the two leg bones has widened — the ankle may feel like it gives way or won’t support pushing-off forces during running.
Diagnosis
exam first, imaging secondTenderness above the ankle on the outside of the leg, plus two specific exam moves: the squeeze test (compressing the tibia and fibula at mid-calf reproduces ankle pain) and the external rotation stress test. Specific X-ray views show whether the gap between the two leg bones at the ankle has widened. Standing X-rays of both ankles together help identify subtle instability. MRI and CT confirm ligament injury and any widening. X-rays of the entire fibula are essential — to rule out the Maisonneuve fracture.
Treatment Path
how care progresses at OSINon-weight-bearing cast
Stable injuries are managed in a non-weight-bearing cast or boot through the early healing phase, followed by progressive return to weight-bearing and rehab.
Physical therapy
Gradually adding weight back, strengthening the side-of-the-ankle muscles, and balance/proprioception drills to retrain the reflexes that catch the ankle.
Surgical Options at OSI
if non-operative care isn't enoughAny widening of the gap between the leg bones at the ankle (called diastasis) needs surgical stabilization — usually a screw or a flexible "tightrope" that holds the two bones together while the ligaments heal. Without that, the ankle will heal in a permanently unstable position and arthritis follows.
Further Reading
authoritative sourcesExternal patient-education references and related OSI pages for additional background:
