An ankle injury typically involves damage to the bones, ligaments, or tendons in the ankle joint, often due to twisting, rolling, or impact. Common types include sprains, fractures, and strains, with symptoms like pain, swelling, bruising, and difficulty bearing weight. Treatment depends on the severity and may include rest, ice, compression, elevation (RICE), physical therapy, and in more severe cases, immobilization or surgery.
Ankle injury treatment in 2 Orthopedic surgery clinics in Estonia
2 clinics specializing in Orthopedic surgery providing treatment of
Ankle injury
Ankle injury refers to damage or trauma to the structures in the ankle joint, including ligaments, tendons, or bones. It can cause pain, swelling, instability, and may require rest, rehabilitation, bracing, or surgical intervention for proper recovery.
Read more...
disease in Estonia.
Sorted by:
Relevance
Rating
Relevance
Prices for popular procedures:
Prices for popular procedures:
Tallinn, Estonia
Specializations: Cardiac surgery, Vascular surgery, Spine surgery, Orthopedic surgery, Oncology
Languages: English, Russian
Confido Medical Centre opened at Veerenni 51 in Tallinn in November 2020. Ours is the largest private medical centre in Estonia with doctors and specialists
read more
1 nearby similar clinic in Estonia
Perhaps you should consider 1 more clinic we have found nearby basing on your Location, Specialization, Disease filters applied.
Prices for popular procedures:
Clinics grouping by rating
Clinic with the highest rating of 3 — Estmedica in Tallinn, Estonia, clinic with the most reviews number of 185 — Confido Medical Centre in Tallinn, Estonia.
Countries with the highest number of clinics treating the diseases:
Ankle injury:
worldwide
872 clinics
United Kingdom
67 clinics
Germany
49 clinics
Brazil
36 clinics
Turkey
33 clinics
Australia
32 clinics
Related procedures:
Procedures are likely to be used for Ankle injury treatment:
Ankle ligament reconstruction surgery,
Foot and ankle arthroscopy,
Pediatric arthroscopy,
and
Platelet-rich plasma (PRP) injection into the ligament/joint
.