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3 Mistakes Keeping Your Ankle Sprain From Fully Healing (And What Actually Works)

4/14/2026

3 Comments

 
Ankle sprains seem simple… until they keep coming back.

We see this all the time at SRVPT—patients who “rolled their ankle” weeks or even months ago, rested, maybe did a few band exercises… but still don’t feel stable. Then it happens again.

Here’s the truth:
Most ankle sprains don’t fail because of the injury — they fail because of incomplete rehab.


Picture
Mistake #1: Resting Too Long

Yes, the first few days matter:
  • Reduce swelling
  • Protect the joint
  • Avoid aggravating movements
But after that?

Too much rest = weakness + stiffness + poor recovery

Research shows that early, controlled movement leads to faster recovery and better long-term outcomes compared to prolonged immobilization.

What to do instead:
  • Begin gentle ankle motion early (circles, pumps)
  • Progress to weight-bearing as tolerated
  • Don’t wait until it “feels perfect” to start moving
Picture
Mistake #2: Only Doing Basic Band Exercises

Band work is fine… but it’s not enough.

Most people stop rehab here:
  • Inversion / eversion with a band
  • Maybe some calf raises

The problem?

Your ankle doesn’t fail when you’re sitting — it fails when you’re on one leg.

Sports, walking on uneven ground, and even stepping off a curb all require:
  • Single-leg control
  • Strength through the hip + knee + ankle
  • Stability under load
If you don’t train that, you’re not fully rehabbed.


Picture
Mistake #3: Skipping Single-Leg Strength & Control

This is the big one.

Balance alone isn’t enough — you need strength + control on one leg.

A quick story:
I personally rolled my ankles 10+ times each playing basketball growing up. Tape, braces, rest—you name it. Nothing really worked long-term.

What finally fixed it?

Consistent single-leg strength training.

Once I built strength and control through one leg, the instability stopped.

Key exercises we use at SRVPT:
  • Single-leg deadlifts
  • Step-ups to balance (drive knee up and hold)
  • Single-leg squats
  • Lateral step-downs

These train your body to:
  • Absorb force
  • Control motion
  • React to instability

Exactly what prevents re-injury.

What the Research Says
  • Exercise therapy (especially balance + strength training) significantly reduces the risk of recurrent ankle sprains
  • Neuromuscular + strengthening programs improve long-term stability
  • Chronic ankle instability is often due to strength and control deficits—not just ligament damage

If you don’t retrain strength + control, the ankle stays vulnerable.

When to Get It Checked Out

You shouldn’t still be dealing with:
  • Repeated “rolling” or giving way
  • Pain or stiffness weeks later
  • Lack of confidence on one leg
If that’s happening, it’s usually not “just healing slowly”—it’s missing the right type of rehab.

The Bottom Line

Most ankle sprains don’t need more rest…

They need better progression.
  • Early movement
  • Progressive loading
  • Single-leg strength + control
That’s what actually keeps it from coming back.

Ready to Get Back to 100%?

Most ankle sprains improve quickly with the right program.

If you’re still dealing with instability or repeat sprains, we can help you get back to full strength—and keep you there.

Call or text us @ 925-552-5787 to schedule an evaluation this week
3 Comments

    Author

    The therapists at SRVPT have a variety of backgrounds and are interested in sharing our knowledge with you!  Check out their bios for more specific information.

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