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General Reference

Am J Sports Med 2001;29:100; Med Sci Sports Exerc 1999;37:S48; Phys Sportsmed 1999;27:57

Pathophys and Cause

Cause:Overuse, rapid increase in training load or intensity

Pathophys:Repetitive stress leads to bony microfracture; may progress to overt fracture with overload event

Epidemiology

May be athletic or sedentary

Signs and Symptoms

Sx:Pain with weight bearing, relieved with unloading. Night pain typical

Si:Tenderness, swelling, ecchymosis. May be able to palpate area of focal tenderness and periosteal swelling. Tuning fork vibration transmits along bone and felt as pain at fracture site.

Course

Generally recovers if load modified so that pain-free.

Complications

Nonunion. Progression to complete fracture, open fracture (rare). Anterior tibial “dreaded black line” heals only after surgery because of distraction bowing with loading of tibia

Lab and Xray

Xray:Plain films may be normal or show localized periosteal reaction. Bone scintography nonspecific, virtually 100% sensitive. MRI may show bony edema and fracture line, sensitivity same as bone scan but more specific (Phys Sportsmed 1998;26:31); CT best for visualizing actual fracture line in foot bones.

Treatment

Rx:

Activity modification and splinting for 2-6 weeks, or until comfortable weight bearing. Gradual return to activity with pain as guide: