Your treatment may vary based on the severity of your injury. You may need only nonsurgical treatment for your injury if:
- You don't have any bone breaks
- Your bones are still in alignment
- Your ligaments are not completely torn
For these types of injuries, your treatment might include:
- Taking pain medicines
- Wearing a non-weight-bearing cast or boot for 6 weeks
- Wearing a weight-bearing cast or a special foot support after the first 6 weeks
- Having serial X-rays to find out how your foot is healing
It is very important not to put weight on your foot during the early healing period.
If your injury was more severe than this, you likely will need surgery as well. Your doctor may do a surgery called open reduction and internal fixation. During this surgery, they put your bones back in the correct alignment. Using special metal plates and screws, your surgeon physically reattaches the pieces of your bones back together. They might remove some or all of this hardware at a later date. They might also repair other ligament injuries.
Less often, the surgeon does a joint fusion as the initial procedure. Surgeons usually only do this if the damage is very bad and they cannot fix it. This surgery permanently fuses one or more of the bones in the region together. This is so they heal into a single, solid piece.
After either type of surgery, you would need to use a splint or cast for a few weeks. You should not put weight on your foot during this time.