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Foot Stress Fracture Treatment Near Fenton, MI | Podiatrist

Medically reviewed by Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM

Board-certified podiatric surgeon | Balance Foot & Ankle, Howell & Bloomfield Hills, MI
Last reviewed: May 2026

MICHIGAN PODIATRIST INSIGHT

Foot stress fractures near Fenton look like soft tissue injuries for the first 7–10 days on X-ray — and two specific fracture locations carry a 25–30% non-union risk that requires immediate non-weight-bearing rather than a boot. Walking on the wrong stress fracture for even 2 weeks converts a healing injury into a complete fracture. Call (810) 206-1402 for same-day stress fracture evaluation.

Stress Fracture Foot Fenton Mi - Michigan podiatrist, Balance Foot & Ankle
Stress Fracture Foot Fenton Mi treatment | Balance Foot & Ankle, Michigan

Medically Reviewed by: Dr. Tom Biernacki DPM · Board-Certified Podiatrist · Balance Foot & Ankle PLLC · Updated 2026

Foot Stress Fracture Treatment Near Fenton, MI

Foot stress fracture diagnosis and treatment near Fenton, MI is available at Balance Foot & Ankle in Howell. Dr. Biernacki DPM identifies the fracture location and type — distinguishing the low-risk 2nd/3rd metatarsal shaft fracture from the high-risk 5th metatarsal Jones fracture and navicular stress fracture requiring surgical fixation. MRI for negative X-ray cases. Call (810) 206-1402.

Not All Foot Stress Fractures Are Equal: Location Determines Risk

The single most important factor in managing a foot stress fracture is location — not severity. Two fractures can look similar on X-ray but have completely different treatment requirements and risk of non-union. Low-risk stress fractures (2nd and 3rd metatarsal shafts, calcaneus, medial sesamoid): excellent blood supply, high union rates with conservative treatment — protected weight-bearing in a cam boot for 6–8 weeks, no surgery typically needed. High-risk stress fractures require surgical consultation: 5th metatarsal Jones fracture (at the metaphyseal-diaphyseal junction, zone II — the watershed zone with poor blood supply) has a 30–50% non-union rate with conservative treatment alone — intramedullary screw fixation is often recommended for athletes and active patients; navicular stress fracture (the “career-ending fracture” in athletes without proper treatment) has a notoriously poor blood supply to the central third and requires NWB cast immobilization for 6–8 weeks minimum, with surgical fixation for delayed presentation or elite athletes; sesamoid stress fracture risks AVN and chronic pain with early loading. X-ray is negative in up to 50% of early stress fractures — MRI is the gold standard for diagnosis when clinical suspicion is high (point tenderness on bone + activity-related pain + runner or recently increased activity). In our Fenton-area athletic patients, the most common error is misclassifying a Jones fracture as a 5th metatarsal avulsion — the avulsion is at the base (styloid process), the Jones is at the metaphyseal-diaphyseal junction 1.5–2cm distal. Different fracture, completely different management.

Key Takeaway: Location determines risk. Jones fracture (zone II of 5th metatarsal) = high non-union risk, often needs screw fixation. Navicular = NWB 6–8 weeks minimum, surgical for athletes. 2nd/3rd metatarsal shaft = low risk, boot 6–8 weeks. X-ray negative ≠ no stress fracture — MRI if high clinical suspicion. Female athletes + low bone density = RED-S screening (Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport).

Diagnosis and Treatment

Clinical diagnosis: Point tenderness on bone (not soft tissue), activity-related pain onset 2–6 weeks into increased training, tuning fork vibration test positive over fracture site. Imaging: Weight-bearing X-ray first. If negative at 2 weeks, MRI — shows bone marrow edema before cortical disruption visible on X-ray. Low-risk (2nd/3rd metatarsal): Cam boot, reduced activity 6–8 weeks, gradual return to activity. 5th metatarsal Jones fracture: NWB cast vs intramedullary screw fixation depending on patient activity level and fracture pattern. Active patients strongly advised surgical fixation — earlier return to sport, lower refracture rate. Navicular: NWB cast 6–8 weeks mandatory, MRI-confirmed union before return to sport. CT scan to assess healing. Surgical fixation for delayed presentation or high-level athletes. Prevention: Gradual training load increase (10% weekly rule), adequate calcium and vitamin D, bone density screening for recurrent stress fractures.

⚠️ See a Podiatrist If:

  • Foot pain that worsens with activity and improves with rest, especially in a runner or recently active person
  • Point tenderness directly on a bone (not soft tissue pain)
  • 5th metatarsal base injury — distinguish avulsion from Jones fracture before treating as a sprain
  • Recurrent stress fractures — bone density evaluation and RED-S screening needed
  • Continued pain at 6–8 weeks in a stress fracture boot — imaging to confirm healing

Stress Fracture Recovery Products

These products support recovery during and after the immobilization period — always use under your podiatrist’s guidance:

Aircast AirSelect walking boot stress fracture

Aircast AirSelect Walking Boot

The gold standard in stress fracture immobilization. Pneumatic air cells distribute pressure evenly around the foot and ankle while maintaining the position that allows bone healing. We prescribe the Aircast for most metatarsal and navicular stress fractures — balancing protection with the ability to still walk and function during recovery.

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Thorne calcium vitamin D3 bone healing supplement stress fracture

Thorne Calcium-D (Calcium + Vitamin D3)

Bone healing requires adequate calcium and vitamin D3 — nutrients that many Michigan residents are deficient in due to limited sun exposure. Thorne uses calcium malate (better absorbed than carbonate) with 1000 IU D3. For stress fracture patients with low vitamin D, supplementation has been shown to accelerate bone remodeling timelines significantly.

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OrthoInfo – AAOS: Stress Fractures

Getting to Our Office From Fenton

Our Howell office at 4330 E Grand River Ave, Howell, MI 48843 is about 15 minutes from Fenton via US-23 N. We accept most major insurance. Call (810) 206-1402 or book online.

Foot Pain With Activity? Rule Out a Stress Fracture

Balance Foot & Ankle · Serving Fenton & Michigan

(810) 206-1402

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📋 Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM, FACFAS answers:

A stress fracture in the foot near Fenton is treated primarily with rest, protected weight-bearing, and immobilization. Our podiatrist serving Fenton typically places the patient in a walking boot or stiff-soled shoe to offload the injured bone while it heals. Crutches may be recommended for high-grade fractures. Activity modification is critical — returning to running or impact activity too soon is the most common cause of delayed healing. Imaging with X-ray or MRI confirms the location and severity. Most stress fractures heal within six to eight weeks with proper care. For athletes near Fenton, we create a return-to-activity plan and evaluate contributing factors such as training load, footwear, and bone density to reduce the risk of future fractures.

Balance Foot & Ankle surgeons are affiliated with Trinity Health Michigan, Corewell Health, and Henry Ford Health — three of Michigan’s largest health systems.