Picture This

Something is Afoot


 

3. A 39-year-old man was playing a game of pick-up basketball when he felt a pop, immediately followed by a sharp pain in the back of his ankle and lower leg. He now walks with a limp image

3. A 39-year-old man was playing a game of pick-up basketball when he felt a pop, immediately followed by a sharp pain in the back of his ankle and lower leg. He now walks with a limp. The cause is

a) Achilles tendon rupture

b) Medial gastrocnemius tear

c) Calf muscle strain

d) Posterior tibial stress syndrome

Diagnosis: Often diagnosed as an ankle sprain, an Achilles tendon rupture most commonly occurs in middle-aged men from overexertion in sports—usually tennis, racquetball, basketball, or badminton, which involve bursts of jumping, pivoting, and running. Rupture may also occur from a sudden stumble, fall from a significant height, or abrupt step into a hole or off a curb, which causes the tendon to overstretch forcefully.

Pages

Recommended Reading

A Click Is Not a Clunk: Developmental Dysplasia of the Hip in a Newborn
Clinician Reviews
Low Back Pain: Evidence-based Diagnosis and Treatment
Clinician Reviews
When Man’s Legs “Give Out,” His Buttocks Takes the Brunt
Clinician Reviews
Pain starting in knee later arises in other joints
Clinician Reviews
These Patients Knee’d Your Help
Clinician Reviews
Give a Hand
Clinician Reviews
Shoulder Dislocations
Clinician Reviews
From Hydroplane to Ankle Pain
Clinician Reviews
When Can Exercise Supplant Surgery for Degenerative Meniscal Tears?
Clinician Reviews
The Man With No Medical History
Clinician Reviews

Related Articles