You know by listening to your doctor. The MRI should tell him everything he needs to know.
2006-11-29 08:47:26
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answer #1
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answered by Blunt Honesty 7
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For a tendon rupture, the area of the rupture is often swollen, tender, bruised (ecchymotic), and may actually have a palpable gap in the tendon. X-rays, although they do not show the tendon reliably, do show the calcaneus. When doing the x-ray, the physician is checking to see if the bone to which the Achilles tendon attached (calcaneus) has been injured. In some cases, the tendon will not tear; but instead, it will literally pull a piece of calcaneal bone off of the rest of the calcaneus. Although this is repairable, the technique is different then merely sewing the two ends of a ruptured tendon together. If the tendon has not ruptured, then the patient may have sustained only a pulling injury to the tendon. This type of injury results in a stretch injury to the tendon which is called tendonitis. Although this often heals without surgery, until completely healed, the tendon is structurally weaker then normal and is at an increased risk for tearing with continued athletic activity or additional injury producing situations. The most reliable diagnostic study for a suspected rupture of the Achilles' tendon is the Thompson test. This is a test performed during the physical exam. When then test is abnormal, the probability of a ruptured tendon being present is extremely high.
2006-11-29 08:50:10
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answer #2
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answered by Martha P 7
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Do this simple test. Lie on your stomach and extend your feet beyond the edge of the bed. Get someone to squeeze your calf muscles and observe your foot. An intact Achilles tendon will enable your foot to move upward. If it is completely torn, there won't be any movement in your foot no matter how hard you squeeze. If partially ruptured, the movement would not be as vigorous as the uninjured extremity. Did your doc do this? This is an essential examination for torn TAs before doing MRIs.
2006-11-29 21:32:30
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answer #3
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answered by Rene B 5
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Greg Ellis, commencing LB for the Cowboys for the previous couple of seasons, tore his Achilles final season, and he tried to return returned this preseason yet he could no longer make a superb restoration, so he retired fairly. Tearing your achilles is very extra often than not occupation ending for gamers who desire velocity. Ekuban of the Broncos only tore his Achilles, so it's going to be exciting to work out if he can come back (he relatively has a extra effective shot at it as a DE than he could if he replaced right into a CB or something).
2016-10-13 09:20:03
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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What do you want help with? Get the MRI and then you'll know if there is a tear..partial or not.
Nothing anyone HERE can do for you.
2006-11-29 08:48:13
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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you would know if it's torn. my dad tore his about 5 years ago, and was told that the pain is the equivalent of giving birth. it's probably pulled or strained, not torn.
2006-11-29 08:53:33
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answer #6
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answered by Becca 1
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wow that must hurt it probably was torn...tip look both ways before crossing the street
2006-11-29 08:47:08
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answer #7
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answered by dangit103 2
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