The ligamentous injury is not severe enough to cause chronic instability.
Ankle lateral gutter.
It is an uncommon cause of chronic lateral ankle pain 6 typically seen in athletes 3 5.
The investigators noted that if hypertrophic synovitis is present this maneuver impinges the synovium between the neck of the talus and the distal tibia.
Patients will complain of pain around the anterolateral ankle gutter during weightbearing and may feel like the pain is deep in the joint.
Medial and lateral gutter ankle impingement may result after total ankle replacement tar.
The anterolateral ankle gutter is the most common site of ankle impingement.
The ankle impingement sign described by malloy uses thumb pressure over the lateral gutter while taking the ankle from a plantar flexed position to maximal dorsiflexion.
Impingement after tar can be a source of pain and decreased patient satisfaction which in turn results in poor outcomes 1impingement is of an unknown complex etiology and is likely multifactorial.
The impingement process begins when an inversion sprain tears the anterior talofibular and or the calcaneofibular ligament.
3 during an inversion ankle injury the anterior talofibular ligament and calcaneofibular ligament are affected as is the distal syndesmosis.
3 over time a meniscoid lesion is often the result of the lateral ankle injury.
However inadequate immobilization and rehabilitation may lead to chronic inflammation in the ligament resulting in formation of scar tissue.
Anterolateral impingement syndrome of the ankle is caused by entrapment of the hypertrophic soft tissue in the lateral gutter.
The lateral gutter of the ankle joint can be found by running the thumb medially over the anterior and medial edge of the fibula.