For what it's worth I get a similar thing in the same ankle; I've found squatting doesn't exacerbate it and seems to help it resolve.
I've been having some ankle pain recently and wanted to get some advice. Kind of an odd pain, where I can be walking along normally and suddenly I get a pain on the medial aspect of my left ankle, just distal to the end of the tibia. More of a dull pain, not sharp, maybe 2-3 on the pain scale. There's no particular movement that makes the pain appear and I can't make it appear by moving my foot on its own sitting here at my desk. Not sure what might be involved. Tibialis posterior? No swelling that I can detect. Because the pain is intermittent, I can't really tell if ibuprofen is having any effect. I have a history of plantar fasciitis, which comes and goes and is right now giving me some pain on the bottom of my heel. I don't recall any particular incident that started the pain and it hasn't affected my lifting. I do wrap the ankle with an Ace bandage before a workout, mostly as a psychological thing, I guess. Today is my heavy workout day with squats and deadlifts and I just wanted to see if I could get any input from anyone who might have had a similar experience . I'm guessing the general consensus will be to work through it, but I just wanted to check.
Thanks.
-RJP
For what it's worth I get a similar thing in the same ankle; I've found squatting doesn't exacerbate it and seems to help it resolve.
Thanks for the input, iz. That's been my experience as well. How long did it take to go away, if it has? Or does it come back on a regular basis?
At the gym tonight, I didn't notice anything doing squats and deads, but I found the pain appeared when I had weight on the left foot and then turned to the left. In the locker room after my workout, I tried the same motion and no pain. Walking down the stairs at the gym, no pain. Walking down the stairs at home right after, pain. Weird.
-RJP
According to "The Triggerpoint Therapy Workbook", pain in that area can be caused by trigger points in the gastrocnemius muscle of the calf. You might try rolling the area with a lacrosse ball. If it hurts, you're doing some good.
Before I read your response, I did exactly that, rolling a lacrosse ball in the area just below the end of the tibia. Hurt a good bit during the rolling but the pain went away when I was done, so good call. Came back a couple of days ago, more rolling, pain gone again.
-RJP
See if your everyday walking shoes are worn out. When my shoes get worn out, I get ankle pain.