Stress Fractures

Cared for across all 6 OSI locations

Overview

what it is and why it matters

A stress fracture is a tiny crack in a bone caused by repeated impact rather than a single hard hit. Bone is constantly remodeling itself — breaking down and rebuilding stronger. When you load it faster than it can rebuild (think a runner ramping up mileage too quickly, or a soldier in a new training program), microscopic cracks accumulate until they form a real fracture. Stress fractures fall into two big buckets. Low-risk stress fractures (the inner side of the shin bone, the metatarsals in the foot, the smaller leg bone, the rim of the pelvis) heal reliably with rest and activity changes. High-risk stress fractures (the front of the shin bone, the navicular bone in the foot, the Jones zone of the fifth metatarsal, the neck of the thigh bone, the inner ankle, the kneecap, the small bones under the big toe) are different — they often don't heal on their own and may need surgery, especially in athletes.

In women with recurring stress fractures, we screen for the Female Athlete Triad — a combination of disordered eating, missed periods, and reduced bone density. The triad substantially raises stress fracture risk and is treatable; missing it sets a patient up for years of repeat injuries.

Symptoms

what you may notice
  • Pain in a specific spot on the bone that comes on during activity and eases with rest
  • Pain that gets worse over days to weeks as you keep training through it
  • Tenderness when you press directly on the bone at the painful spot
  • Mild swelling over the area — sometimes barely visible
  • Pain that starts later in a run or workout and now begins earlier and earlier each session
  • Night pain or pain at rest in advanced cases — a sign the fracture is worsening

Diagnosis

exam first, imaging second

Plain X-rays often miss stress fractures in the first few weeks — the bone changes lag behind the injury. An MRI is the most sensitive test and grades severity from I to IV. A bone scan is an alternative when MRI isn't available. For high-risk sites, a CT scan checks whether the fracture has broken through the outer wall of the bone. For repeated or unusual stress fractures, we add a bone density scan (DEXA) to look for underlying weakness.

Treatment Path

how care progresses at OSI
1

Activity modification

For low-risk stress fractures, the prescription is straightforward: stop the high-impact activity that caused it (running, jumping) and switch to low-impact cross-training (swimming, biking) until the pain is gone. The bone needs the load off it to finish remodeling.

2

Non-weight-bearing immobilization

Higher-grade low-risk fractures and the initial management of high-risk fractures usually get a walking boot or crutches — taking weight off the bone entirely for a stretch.

3

Bone health evaluation and treatment

We optimize the building blocks the bone needs to heal: calcium and vitamin D, and a workup for any underlying bone-health problem if the fracture pattern is unusual or recurring.

Surgical Options at OSI

if non-operative care isn't enough

High-risk stress fractures are the surgical ones — especially the navicular bone in the foot, the upper-outer side of the thigh-bone neck, and the so-called dreaded black line on the front of the shin bone (a chronic stress fracture that classically refuses to heal on its own). Active patients with these fractures, or any stress fracture that has broken through the outer wall of the bone, are candidates for surgical fixation with a screw or plate.

Providers Who Treat Stress Fractures

sports-medicine team

Further Reading

authoritative sources

External patient-education references and related OSI pages for additional background:

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