Ankle Instability
ANKLE STABILITY & SUPPORT
Ankle instability can develop after repeated sprains, ligament injury, or incomplete recovery from a prior ankle injury. It may cause the ankle to feel weak, loose, or likely to give way during walking, sports, or uneven-ground activity.
- Ankle feels weak or gives way
- Repeated sprains or rolling episodes
- Swelling, soreness, or stiffness
- Bracing and rehab may help stability
Evaluation & Next Steps
- Clear severity assessment and next steps
- Supportive care and recovery guidance
- Care across 4 Las Vegas locations
Call: (702) 703-4340
Hours: Mon–Fri: 8am–5pm
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Quick Summary
Key takeaway: Ankle instability happens when the ankle does not feel reliably supported, often after ligament injury or repeated sprains. Evaluation helps determine whether symptoms are related to weakness, ligament laxity, alignment, tendon problems, or another source of ankle pain.
Care usually focuses on restoring support, improving strength and balance, protecting the ankle during activity, and identifying when imaging or additional treatment planning may be needed.
Overview
What is Ankle Instability?
Ankle instability is a feeling that the ankle may roll, buckle, or give way. It often develops after one or more ankle sprains when the ligaments, muscles, or balance system do not fully regain support.
Why Evaluation Matters
Ongoing instability can increase the chance of repeated sprains, chronic swelling, pain, and activity limitation. Evaluation helps identify the severity of instability and whether bracing, rehabilitation, imaging, or additional treatment should be considered.
Symptoms
Ankle instability symptoms may be mild at first or become more noticeable during sports, stairs, uneven ground, or quick direction changes.
Giving Way or Buckling
The ankle may feel like it rolls outward, slips, or cannot be trusted during activity.
Repeated Sprains
Frequent ankle rolling or recurring sprains may suggest lingering ligament weakness or poor support.
Swelling or Soreness
Chronic swelling, tenderness, or aching may continue after the original injury has healed.
Balance or Confidence Problems
Some patients avoid activity because the ankle feels unstable or unpredictable.
Seek care now if…
Seek care promptly if the ankle cannot bear weight, swelling is severe, pain is worsening, the ankle looks deformed, or instability keeps causing repeated falls or sprains.
Causes & Risk Factors
Ankle instability often develops after ligament injury, repeated sprains, or incomplete recovery. Weakness, balance deficits, foot structure, or tendon problems may also contribute.
Common Causes
- Prior ankle sprain
- Ligament stretching or tearing
- Incomplete rehab after injury
- Poor balance or ankle control
Instability is often related to the ankle losing reliable support after injury, especially when strength and balance do not fully return.
Risk Factors
- History of repeated sprains
- Sports with cutting or jumping
- Uneven-ground activity
- High arches or foot alignment issues
- Weakness around the ankle
- Loose ligaments
- Returning to activity too soon
- Prior ankle fracture or trauma
Diagnosis
Diagnosis starts with a review of injury history, symptoms, activity limits, and a focused ankle exam. Imaging may be recommended when pain persists, instability is severe, or another injury needs to be ruled out.
Typical Evaluation
- Sprain and injury history
- Ankle stability testing
- Strength and balance review
- Gait and alignment assessment
- X-rays or MRI when needed
What to Bring
- Prior imaging or reports
- Brace or orthotics used
- Activity or sport goals
- Timeline of sprains
- Current medications
Treatment Options
Treatment depends on how often the ankle gives way, the severity of ligament injury, activity goals, pain level, and whether symptoms improve with support and rehabilitation.
Related care: Treatment planning may include bracing, activity modification, rehabilitation, balance training, imaging review, or surgical discussion when instability is persistent or severe.
Early Care
- Activity modification
- Swelling control
- Supportive footwear
- Short-term protection
Bracing / Immobilization
- Ankle brace
- Taping support
- Walking boot when needed
- Activity protection
Rehabilitation / Physical Therapy
- Strength training
- Balance retraining
- Range-of-motion work
- Return-to-activity progression
Additional Evaluation
- Repeated giving way
- Persistent swelling
- Failed rehab
- Concern for ligament injury
Recovery
Recovery depends on the severity of instability, ligament involvement, strength, balance, activity demands, and how consistently the ankle is protected during healing and rehabilitation.
What Helps Most
- Consistent rehab: Strength and balance work help restore support.
- Brace use: External support may reduce repeat rolling.
- Gradual return: Activity should progress as control improves.
- Footwear support: Stable shoes can help limit strain.
- Follow-up care: Persistent instability may need reassessment.
When to Follow Up
- Repeated sprains: The ankle keeps rolling or giving way.
- Persistent swelling: Swelling does not settle with care.
- Activity limits: Instability affects work, sports, or walking.
- Pain continues: Pain persists after the initial injury period.
- Brace dependence: The ankle feels unsafe without support.
Frequently Asked Questions
Ankle instability may feel like the ankle is weak, loose, or likely to roll during walking, sports, stairs, or uneven-ground activity.
Yes. Instability often develops after one or more sprains, especially when ligaments are stretched or rehabilitation was incomplete.
Diagnosis may include a symptom review, injury history, ankle stability testing, strength and balance assessment, and imaging when needed.
Many patients improve with bracing, supportive footwear, activity changes, and rehabilitation focused on strength and balance. Persistent or severe instability may need further evaluation.
Evaluation is recommended if the ankle keeps giving way, sprains recur, swelling persists, or instability limits walking, work, or sports.
Ongoing instability can increase the risk of repeated sprains, chronic pain, swelling, and reduced confidence with activity.
Locations
LVVIS West Side Consultation Office
8930 W Sunset Rd, Suite 350
Las Vegas, NV 89148
Consultations and vascular evaluations
LV2 Limb & Vascular Division
8930 W Sunset Rd, Suite 350
Las Vegas, NV 89148
Limb preservation and podiatry partnership care
LVVIS East Procedure Office
2250 E Flamingo Rd, Suite 100
Las Vegas, NV 89119
Procedures, diagnostics, and circulatory care
LVVIS West Side Surgical Center
6120 S Fort Apache Rd, Suite 100
Las Vegas, NV 89148
Advanced vascular and interventional procedures