What are the four compartments of the lower leg?
Anterior, lateral, superficial posterior, deep posterior.
Which compartment is most commonly affected by compartment syndrome?
The anterior compartment.
MOI for an ankle sprain?
Inversion and plantarflexion for lateral sprain; eversion and external rotation for medial sprain.
What ligaments are involved in a lateral ankle sprain?
ATF, CF, PTF.
What ligament is involved in a medial ankle sprain?
Deltoid ligament.
S/S of ankle sprain?
Pain, swelling, decreased ROM, laxity on stress tests, decreased function.
Special tests for ankle sprains?
Anterior drawer (ATF), posterior drawer (PTF), inversion (CF), eversion (deltoid).
Treatment for ankle sprain?
RICE, NSAIDs, taping/bracing, rehab, crutches or boot if needed.
Prevention of ankle sprains?
Tape, brace, strengthen ankle, proprioception exercises.
What is a high ankle sprain?
Syndesmotic sprain — injury to anterior tibiofibular ligament and interosseous membrane.
MOI for high ankle sprain?
Dorsiflexion + external rotation or eversion.
S/S of high ankle sprain?
Pain with ER or DF, swelling, TTP over tib-fib area, + Klieger’s test.
Treatment for high ankle sprain?
Conservative: RICE, crutches or boot, possible surgery if unstable.
MOI for Achilles tendinitis/bursitis?
Overuse, chronic irritation from tight calf, poor shoes, or friction.
S/S of Achilles tendinitis/bursitis?
Pain, thickened tendon, crepitus, decreased dorsiflexion ROM, decreased plantarflexion strength.
Treatment for Achilles tendinitis/bursitis?
Stretching, eccentric strengthening, remove irritation, gradual progress, heel lift or padding.
Prevention of Achilles tendinitis/bursitis?
Proper flexibility, strength, and gradual training progression.
Chronic Achilles tendinitis can lead to what?
Tendon rupture.
MOI for Achilles tendon rupture?
Acute overstretching or violent contraction of the gastrocnemius-soleus complex.
S/S of Achilles rupture?
Sharp pain, swelling, deformity, “pop” sound, inability to plantarflex, positive Thompson test.
Treatment for Achilles rupture?
RICE, splint, refer immediately, surgery, long rehab.
Prevention for Achilles rupture?
Stay flexible and active, strengthen calves, avoid sudden overload.
MOI for lower leg fracture?
Direct trauma.
S/S of lower leg fracture?
Pain, swelling, deformity, crepitus, ↓ function, positive fracture tests.