Bone stress injury continuum
Bone stress injuries result from an imbalance between the formation and removal of load induced damage to bone. Bones deform in response to loading, with the amount of deformation (bone strain) dependant on the magnitude of the load applied and the ability of bone to resist deformation. Exercise can create microscopic damage (microdamage), with the threshold for microdamage formation dependant on; number of bone loading/strain cycles, load/strain size (magnitude), and the bone strain rate (speed at which load/strain is applied).
Pathology Continuum
High Risk Bone Stress Injuries
- Femoral neck
- Anterior cortex of tibia
- Medial Malleolus
- Talus (lateral process)
- Navicular
- 5th Metatarsal (proximal diaphysis)
- 2nd Metatarsal (base)
- Big Toe (sesamoids)
Low Risk Bone Stress Injuries
- Posteromedial tibia (shin)
- Fibia/lateral malleolus
- Femoral shaft
- Pelvis
- Calcaneus
- Diaphysis of 2nd to 4th metatarsals
- Big Toe (sesamoids)
Brad Beer (APAM)
APA Titled Sports & Exercise Physiotherapist (APAM)
B.Physio/ B. Ex. Sc
Author ‘You CAN Run Pain Free!’
Founder POGO Physio
Host The Physical Performance Show
Featured in the Top 50 Physical Therapy Blog