The VerdictMODERATE CONVICTION

If your ankle sprain clicks and slips behind the bone, it may not be a sprain at all.

If your ankle "sprain" clicks or slips behind the outer ankle bone and you can still do a normal anterior drawer without it feeling loose, ask for a MOVING ultrasound scan, not a still X-ray.

  1. What this actually is: a torn strap (the retinaculum), not a torn ligament, so it behaves differently from a normal sprain and is missed up to 40% of the time.
  2. What most people get wrong: they trust a resting exam or a still scan, but the tendon only slips when it moves, so a normal-looking exam does not rule it out.
  3. Start here: get a moving (dynamic) ultrasound, and if you are an athlete or it keeps slipping, ask about a surgical opinion early rather than casting first.

Two tendons turn the corner behind your outer ankle bone, held in a groove by a small strap. When the strap tears, the tendons jump forward over the bone and snap back with movement. That snap is the whole diagnosis, and a still photo of the ankle at rest never catches it, only a moving scan does.

SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.

Ankle-Foot · Physio Engine

Peroneal Tendon Subluxation

The lateral "ankle sprain" that snaps: the small strap holding two tendons behind your outer ankle bone tears, and the tendons flick forward over the bone.

CONVICTION: MODERATE

Red Flags — When to Refer

See these before anything else. If any apply, this needs in-person assessment, not a home plan.

  • A hard fall or crush injury with a swollen heel and pain putting weight on it. A heel-bone (calcaneal) fracture hides this injury roughly one time in three, and it is routinely missed.
  • The tendon keeps popping out of place despite immobilization.
  • A sudden pop on the outer foot with weakness, which can signal a tendon or os peroneum injury.
  • Pain, swelling, or weakness getting worse instead of better.
  • Recurrent slipping in an athlete, or a child, both of which need a specialist opinion.

Refer to: A&E or orthopaedics urgently for a suspected heel-bone fracture; a foot-and-ankle surgeon for recurrent, athletic, or childhood cases.

If your ankle "sprain" clicks or slips behind the outer ankle bone, ask for a moving (dynamic) ultrasound, not a still X-ray.

The tendon only slips when it moves, so a still scan and a resting exam can both look completely normal while the problem is real.

Takes one conversation with your clinician. No equipment needed.

What WorksHow this is actually treated

Cinematic anatomy of the lateral ankle and peroneal tendons

Recognize it and image it dynamically HIGH

The single highest-value action is not a treatment, it is not missing the diagnosis. Suspect peroneal subluxation in any lateral ankle injury that snaps, hurts behind the fibula, and has no looseness on a normal drawer test. Confirm it with a dynamic ultrasound, which reproduces the slip live and catches the "intrasheath" cases a resting exam misses.

Acute first-time, low-demand: immobilize MODERATE

A below-knee boot or cast for about 4 to 6 weeks is the conservative option, but be honest: it fails (the tendon redislocates) in roughly 40 to 50% of cases.

Once stable and cleared: resisted outward ankle turns with a band (3 × 12-15), calf raises (3 × 12), and single-leg balance (3 × 30-45 sec), daily, staying below any clicking. Note: no study defines exact sets and reps for this condition. These are standard ankle rehab, not a tested protocol.

Recurrent or athlete: surgery MODERATE

Repair of the strap, often with deepening of the groove behind the fibula. No single technique is proven superior, but adding groove deepening to strap repair returns people to sport better than repair alone, and reattaching the strap edged out the bone-block method on recurrence. Return to prior sport is around 5 to 6 months, with long-term re-slipping under 1.5%.

Tier 3 — Emerging / subgroup-specific

Tendoscopic groove deepening for the intrasheath subgroup (strap intact, tendons switching inside the sheath): a small keyhole series improved scores markedly with no recurrence. EMERGING

Post-surgical rehabilitation (strengthening, balance, graded return) follows repair, but no trial specifies the protocol.

What Doesn't Work

  • Treating it as a lateral ankle sprain and never examining the tendon behind the fibula. This is the central error, and it is why up to 40% are missed.
  • Relying on a static scan or a resting exam to rule it out. The intrasheath cases look normal at rest.
  • A home loading program as the fix for a true acute dislocation. The evidence for non-surgical care is immobilization, not exercise.

Return to TrainingThe criteria, not the calendar

Conviction: MODERATE

The recognition story is strong: the misdiagnosis rate, the torn-strap mechanism, dynamic ultrasound as the confirming test, and the roughly 29% overlap with heel-bone fractures are all well-supported. The treatment specifics are only moderate, because the entire field is built on small, uncontrolled case series with zero randomized trials and no clinical guideline.

What would change the recognition claim

A diagnostic-accuracy study reporting sensitivity and specificity for the provocation exam and for dynamic ultrasound against a keyhole-surgery reference would turn "consistent expert opinion" into measured accuracy.

What would change the treatment claim

A randomized trial in acute first-time dislocation comparing immobilize-then-rehab against early strap repair, measuring re-slipping at 24 months and criterion-based return to sport, would settle the conservative-versus-surgery question.

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The Full Picture — Anatomy, Diagnosis & Evidence

What's Actually Going On

Cinematic anatomy of the fibula, retromalleolar groove and peroneal tendons

The peroneus longus and brevis muscles run down the outside of your lower leg and turn the corner behind the outer ankle bone (the lateral malleolus), sitting in a shallow groove on the back of the fibula. A band called the superior peroneal retinaculum is the strap that pins them in that groove.

Subluxation is a failure of that strap. It tears, pulls off the bone (sometimes taking a fleck of bone with it), or stretches out, and the tendons ride forward over the bone. The usual injury is a forced upward-and-outward twist of the foot, or a hard reflexive contraction while landing or stopping. That is a different direction from the rolling-in of an ordinary sprain, which is exactly why a ligament is not the problem here. Some ankles are set up for it: a shallow or rounded groove, an enlarged bump on the heel bone, or an oversized muscle belly crowding the groove.

How to Identify It

Cinematic clinical assessment of the lateral ankle

There is no validated bedside test with published accuracy numbers for this condition, and the "intrasheath" cases are invisible on a normal exam. So the pattern plus a moving scan carry the diagnosis.

  • Pain located behind and above the outer ankle bone, over the tendons, not in front over the ligaments
  • A snap, click, or feeling that the tendon slips with circling or push-off
  • Injury from an upward-and-outward twist or a landing, not a roll-in
  • Usually a normal anterior drawer, meaning the ligaments are not loose Sn/Sp: DATA UNAVAILABLE
  • Dynamic ultrasound is the confirming test, because it films the tendon slipping in real time imaging of choice

The Debate

Cast it first, or operate early?

One view: an acute first dislocation gets a conservative cast trial. Counter-view: in athletes, repair it early, because casting fails 40 to 50% of the time (PMID 10416549).

Follow demand level. Low-demand: a cast trial is reasonable. Athlete or high-demand: get a surgical opinion early. There is no randomized trial to settle it.

How well does conservative care actually work?

A pre-scan of the literature claimed 62 to 83% success with casting (attributed to a 2019 paper). That paper did not appear in our indexed search, and the studies we retrieved show a 40 to 50% failure rate instead.

We treat the optimistic figure as unverified and lead with the retrieved 40 to 50% failure rate. No clinical guideline exists for this condition as of 2026.

Honest Limitations

The whole field is low-quality evidence

Every study here is a case report or an uncontrolled series. There is not a single randomized trial. The "high success" surgical numbers reflect selected patients operated by experienced surgeons, not a tested comparison.

"Conservative" means immobilization, not rehab

Non-surgical care in these papers is a boot or cast, not an exercise program, and its reported success swings wildly. A physical therapist has almost no trial-grade guidance on how, or whether, to load this conservatively.

Return-to-sport timelines are surgeon-reported

The 5-to-6-month figures come from operative cohorts and are not criterion-based. Gate return on measured milestones, not the calendar.

The Nuance

Cinematic anatomy detail of the peroneal tendon groove

The honest summary on surgery versus conservative care: for a genuine dislocation, the good outcomes in this literature are surgical outcomes. Conservative care is under-studied, poorly defined, and fails often enough that athletes and recurrent cases are steered to surgery, where re-slipping drops under 1.5% and 79 to 90% return to their prior sport at 5 to 6 months (PMID 26519186, 30903219). But because the whole field is uncontrolled, both the surgical success numbers and the conservative failure numbers are directional, not precise. The decision is driven by demand level and chronicity more than by any single test.

The second thing the simple answer misses: peroneal instability rides along with about 29% of heel-bone fractures, scaling to nearly half in the most severe fractures, and it is routinely overlooked (PMID 29548632). Any hindfoot fracture deserves an active look for it.

SourcesKey references

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