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Ankle Pain When Walking? Why it Hurts and How to Fix It

October 24, 2023 · In: Body Region Support, Foot/Ankle, Science-Backed Education

Have you had times where you have gone our grocery shopping or gotten up for your daily walk only to have your ankle start bothering you just minutes in? Ankle pain when walking can be detrimental when walking is a staple in our everyday lives. This post will review common causes of ankle pain and what you can do to help relieve your ankle pain.

**This is not medical advice. Please consult your medical provider for more information.

ankle pain when walking

Anatomy of the Ankle and Foot

There are 28 bones in the foot: 7 tarsal bones, 5 metatarsal bones, 14 phalanges, and 2 sesamoid bones.

The ankle itself consists of the distal tibiofibular joint and the talocrural joint. The distal tibiofibular joint is the syndesmosis joint between the tibia and fibula. The talocrural joint is comprised of the tibia, fibula, and talus. This joint allows for dorsiflexion and plantarflexion of the ankle.

Along the medial side of the ankle (the inner portion), the deltoid ligament provides stability. Stability along the lateral ankle (the outside portion) comes from the anterior talofibular ligament (ATFL), the calcaneofibular ligament (CFL), and the posterior talofibular ligament (PTFL).

The calcaneus (heel bone) is port of the hindfoot of rearfoot. The subtalar joint is part of the hindfoot. This joint is comprised of the tibia and calcaneus. While the foot is much more complex and we will not go down that route in this post, the calcaneus is important to the ankle because it is an attachment point of the achilles tendon.

Possible Causes of Ankle Pain When Walking

Ankle pain mainly comes from injury or overuse. Common injuries include:

Ankle Sprain

Ankle sprains occur when there is extra stress to one or more of the ligaments of the ankle meaning they are overstretched. Sprains most commonly occur to the lateral ankle. The deltoid ligament along the medial side is much larger and stronger which provides extra stability. Poor ankle stability can lead to chronic ankle sprains.

Ankle Strain

A strain refers to overuse of the muscle or tendon. Achilles tendinitis is a common overuse injury.

Fracture

With more severe injuries, fractures can sometimes occur.

Other Causes of Ankle Pain

If you have ankle pain that was not a result of injury, you could be experiencing one of the following:

Arthritis

The ankle can be affected by both osteoarthritis or rheumatoid arthritis. Rheumatoid arthritis is an autoimmune disease and can affect multiple joints throughout the body. Osteoarthritis is a degenerative joint disease where the tissue within the joint breaks down.

Gout

Gout occurs when uric acid builds up and crystals accumulate within the joint. These gout attacks can happen quickly. The crystal accumulation causes inflammation and intense pain.

Neuropathy

Peripheral neuropathy affects nerves of the hands and feet. Damage to these nerves can cause pain, numbness, weakness, or tingling within these regions.

Flatfoot

Flatfoot, or a pronated foot, happens when the arch of the foot falls closer to the ground. Sometimes it can drop almost completely flat, hence the reference name of “flatfoot.” This typically occurs over a length of time. It can come from joint stiffness and weakness of muscles in the foot.

Two important muscles that help keep the arch of the foot at normal height are tibialis posterior and peroneus longus, aka fibularis longus.

How Can I Relieve My Ankle Pain?

If your ankle pain is due to injury or overuse, there are a few things that can help speed up recovery and relieve pain. Strengthening muscles around the ankle can help provide support to sprained ligaments or strained tendons and muscles. It can also help provide extra stability to an ankle that has suffered from chronic ankle sprains.

Balance training is important for the foot and ankle. It helps with stability and proprioception. It also helps reduce the risk of injury. If you’re running and step on an uneven surface, your foot and ankle can more quickly react and stabilize itself if you have efficiently trained your balance.

The key muscles that provide support to the arch of the foot need to be strong. Weakness in the tibialis posterior and peroneus longus can lead to flatfoot and under dysfunctions. Making sure these muscles are strong and can hold optimal foot posture when we are standing is essential.

Exercises for Foot and Ankle Pain Relief

Toe Yoga

This exercise helps with motor control and fine movements within the foot.

In this video, a foam roll is used to help assist with the movement. As you can tell, I have a difficult time with this exercise and you’ll see me do all sorts of funny things. If you also have a difficult time, you can use anything to help hold your toes down as needed.

Start with your foot on the ground. Lift only your big toe up towards the ceiling. Then relax your big toe and lift the other 4 toes up towards the ceiling. This takes a lot of coordination to do!

Alternate your toes moving up and down 10-20 times on each side.

Big Toe Extension Stretch

Grab your big toe pull it backwards until you feel a stretch on the bottom of your foot. This is the first way shown in the video.

The second way to perform this is to place your foot on the ground while sitting and raise your heel up like you would do with a calf raise exercise. Keep the ball of your foot down, especially right under your big toe. This ensures you are stretching your big toe into extension.

Hold this for 10-30 seconds and repeat 2-3 times.

Short fooT

The goal of this exercise is to lift the arch of your foot up while keeping your toes down and avoiding any other compensations. Think about bringing the ball of your foot under your big toe closer towards your heel. You can use your fingers as a cue to help with lifting the arch. Remember, only the arch should be lifted off of the ground.

This movement is very subtle. Pay attention to the arch of my foot in the video to see how small the movement is. Pay attention to the heel and ball of the foot staying in contact with the ground at all times.

Other foot/ankle related posts

  • 5 Reasons Why Balance Exercises are Important for Runners
  • Why Single Leg Stability is Important for Daily Function
  • Weak Ankles Running? Stabilization and Strengthening for Pain Free Running

TL;DR

Ankle pain when walking is most likely due to overuse or injury. This post reviews multiple reasons for ankle pain and covers three exercises to try to start your journey towards pain relief so you can get back to walking and running your errands pain free!

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Tera Sandona

Tera Sandona is a licensed Doctor of Physical Therapy (DPT) and the founder of PT Complete. She helps high-achieving women break out of cycles of chronic pain, stress, and burnout through her Regulate and Rebuild Method, a sequenced approach that addresses the nervous system first and builds strength second. Her work focuses on helping women finally understand their bodies, rebuild strength, and create lasting resilience that fits real life.

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By: Tera Sandona · In: Body Region Support, Foot/Ankle, Science-Backed Education · Tagged: ankle, body mechanics, pain sensitivity, posture and positioning

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I'm a practicing physical therapist based out of sunny SoCal who loves to educate others and share information and knowledge. You can typically find me hard at work trying to manage normal life or cuddled up under a blanket enjoying coffee or desserts I can never seem to get away from!

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The label got attached to slow yoga, easy walks, a The label got attached to slow yoga, easy walks, and gentle bike rides. Active recovery became a category of workouts.

But the label is doing the wrong job. What makes movement “recovery” isn’t the modality. It’s whether your body finishes with more capacity than it started with.

A 20 minute walk can be active recovery on a Monday and a workout your body can’t handle on a Wednesday. It’s the same walk on a different day with a different answer.

The thing most of us are missing isn’t a better workout schedule. It’s a daily look at what your body can actually hold. Some days, that assessment points to movement. Some days, it points to rest. Either one, when it’s used at the right time, it supports the body. When used at the wrong time, it makes things worse.

If you want help learning to read your body signals, comment SIGNALS for the free nervous system workbook.

#activerecovery #pushcrashcycle #listentoyourbody #nervoussystemregulation #chronicpainmanagement
This pattern was mine for years. And if your weeke This pattern was mine for years. And if your weekend looks anything like the one I am about to describe, you already know how Sunday night feels.

Rough week, exhausted by Friday, on the couch all weekend hoping to reset. Sunday night, I would be more depleted than when I started with nothing prepped for the week ahead. And the conclusions running through my head about what kind of person I must be to keep ending up here did not help.

The fix I always reached for was discipline…more structure, more consistency, and more grit. The crash kept coming anyway.

What moved the needle was learning to read what my body could hold, day by day. Some days a workout, some days a walk, some days a couch Sunday was the choice. The decision was made each morning, based on what was actually there.

If you want help learning to read the signs and what to do for them, comment SIGNALS and I will send you the free nervous system workbook.

#chronicpain #chronicfatigue #nervoussystemhealth #painscience #listentoyourbody
If by Wednesday you are already running on fumes, If by Wednesday you are already running on fumes, this one is for you. I called myself undisciplined for years.

Every Sunday night I would land on the same conclusion: more structure, more consistency, and more grit. That was the fix. And every Friday I would crash anyway.

Here is what I did not know about the cycle.

Both doors lead to the same room.

Door one is push. The body sends signals about what it can hold that day. Discipline overrides the signal. Push past the signal once, you crash once. Push past it for a year, you live in the crash.

Door two is rest. The week was rough so the weekend is for resetting. You sit Saturday hoping it works. Sunday comes and you feel worse, so you rest again. By Sunday night nothing is prepped and you are still depleted. The week starts in deficit, so you push harder to catch up, and the crash arrives by Friday.

Different doors. Same room. The room is the cycle.

The missing piece was never more discipline. It was a daily read on what my body could hold and the willingness to let the read be the decision instead of overriding it.

Some days the body can hold a workout. Some days a walk. Some days a couch Sunday is the work. The decision gets made each morning, based on what the body is signaling that day.

If you want help learning to read your own signals, comment SIGNALS for the free nervous system workbook.

#nervoussystemregulation #nervoussystemwork #burnoutisreal #lıstentoyourbody #reclaimyourenergy
is treating movement like it only has two settings is treating movement like it only has two settings.

Keep training like nothing happened or do absolutely nothing.

This is where we need a little more nuance, because if you’re doing your normal gym routine, hikes, runs, or workouts and your pain keeps increasing, something is swelling, you’re limping through it, or you keep changing how you move just to get through it, that is your cue to scale back.

Not because you’re weak or because you ruined everything, but because your body is trying to do its job and constantly irritating the area can drag the whole process out longer than it needs to.

The body is made to heal, but it needs the right environment to do that.

On the other hand, being injured does not automatically mean you need to sit around for two to three weeks doing absolutely nothing until it magically disappears.

If you hurt your shoulder, maybe bench pressing and shoulder presses are not the move right now. But can you train legs? Can you walk? Can you modify the range of motion, load, tempo, or exercise choice? Most of the time, yes.

That middle ground is where a lot of people get stuck.

They either push through because they don’t want to lose progress or they stop everything because they don’t know what else to do.

But injury rehab usually lives somewhere in the middle. It is figuring out what still feels safe, what does not increase symptoms, and what allows you to stay active without poking the bear every single day.

Pain is information, but it is not always a stop sign.

You are not broken, but we do need to be smarter about how you’re moving while your body heals.

Save this for the next time your brain tries to convince you that your only options are “push through it” or “do nothing.”

#movementismedicine #injuryrehab #injurymanagement #stayactive #worksmarter
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