Tibial stress fractures, metatarsal stress reactions, and other bone injuries in high-volume Sydney endurance athletes. Based at Five Dock — we keep you moving while the bone heals and get you back to training faster.
Stress fractures are partial or complete fractures caused by repetitive loading that exceeds the bone's capacity to adapt. In endurance athletes, they most commonly occur in the tibia, metatarsals, and navicular — structures subjected to high repetitive impact loads in running-based sports.
The underlying cause is almost always a load management problem — too much, too soon, with insufficient recovery. Rapid increases in training volume, changes in surface or footwear, and nutritional deficiencies (particularly low energy availability in female athletes) are the most common contributing factors.
The challenge with stress fractures is that the standard advice — rest — leaves athletes severely deconditioned and psychologically rattled by the time they return to training. Our approach, using the Anti-Gravity Treadmill as a key component, allows cardiovascular fitness and running mechanics to be maintained throughout the healing phase.
Early diagnosis matters. A stress reaction identified early — before it becomes a complete stress fracture — has a significantly better prognosis and shorter return-to-running timeline. If you have localised bone pain that worsens with loading, get assessed promptly.
We combine clinical management with Anti-Gravity Treadmill protocols to keep you moving through recovery — not sitting on the couch losing fitness.
The biggest differentiator in our stress fracture management is access to the BTL R-Force Anti-Gravity Treadmill at our Five Dock clinic. By reducing body weight during running, we can keep you moving — maintaining fitness and running mechanics — while the fracture heals.
Athletes who use the Anti-Gravity Treadmill during stress fracture recovery return to ground running faster, with better cardiovascular fitness, and with significantly less psychological anxiety about running. The transition from supported to ground running is far smoother than returning after weeks of complete rest.
Full information on our BTL R-Force Anti-Gravity Treadmill — including the stress fracture protocol, how it works, and how to book — at our dedicated site.
Typically 6–10 weeks before return to ground running, depending on the bone involved, the grade of injury, and individual factors. Tibial stress fractures generally return in 8–12 weeks with appropriate management. Navicular stress fractures are more serious and may take longer. We'll give you a specific timeline based on your imaging and clinical presentation.
Usually yes — swimming and cycling are non-impact and are well tolerated during most lower limb stress fracture recoveries. Specific guidance depends on the location and severity of the fracture. We'll advise on what cross-training is appropriate for your situation.
No referral needed. Book a consult and we'll assess you, arrange appropriate imaging, and build a management plan from there.
Book a consult. Early assessment is the single most important thing you can do for a stress fracture — it determines whether you lose 6 weeks or 16 weeks.
Book an Injury AssessmentNo referral needed · Five Dock, Inner West Sydney · Health fund rebates available
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