        
               Copyright
               Bruno Valeri
               2003-2008
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Foot
and anke injuries
As opposed to a long bone (shin,
thigh, arm) that can fracture and repair itself
quite well, ankle and foot joints are relatively
fragile. When a bone fractures, it repairs itself
by adding bone material (ie calcium) to the
fracture. This calcification welds the bone and
makes it stronger at point of fracture than it
was prior to the injury. For long or flat bones,
this works quite well.
But this repair process can hinder
fluidity of movement in small and delicate
joints.
In addition to our ankles, our
feet each contain 26 small bones involving 33
delicate joints.
Each of these must work fluidly in
order for us to enjoy the walking and running
gait that we take for granted. Loss of this
fluidity results in what we call a limp.
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