X RAY FOOT OBLIQUE VIEW

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X RAY FOOT OBLIQUE VIEW
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X RAY FOOT OBLIQUE VIEW, in Visit Clinic

An oblique foot X-ray captures angled bone images to find fractures, dislocations, arthritis, or foreign bodies in Visit Clinic.

centreCentre Visit
SAMPLE TYPE
Tissue
FASTING REQUIRED
No
GENDER
Male/Female
GET REPORTS IN
24 hours
TEST INCLUDED
1
Customers
20K+Customers
Labs
CertifiedLabs
Rating
4.5+Rating
Accuracy
ProvenAccuracy

What is a X RAY FOOT OBLIQUE VIEW Test in Visit Clinic?

An X RAY FOOT OBLIQUE VIEW is an X-ray image taken at an angle to show the foot’s bones and joints. It helps reveal fractures, dislocations, bone alignment, and joint space changes not seen on straight views. Doctors use it to evaluate injuries after trauma, follow healing after treatment, and check for arthritis, bone infections, or foreign bodies. The oblique angle gives extra detail about overlapping bones. It is quick, widely available, and often done alongside other foot X-ray views to give a complete picture for diagnosis and treatment planning.

X RAY FOOT OBLIQUE VIEW Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

X RAY FOOT OBLIQUE VIEW Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The X RAY FOOT OBLIQUE VIEW test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a X RAY FOOT OBLIQUE VIEW Test in Visit Clinic?

X RAY FOOT OBLIQUE VIEW is commonly ordered as part of a foot X-ray series for people with trauma, persistent pain, swelling, or deformity. Doctors request it to detect fractures, joint problems, dislocations, arthritis changes, infections, or foreign bodies. Abnormal findings often result from injury, repetitive stress, infection, or degenerative disease. A family history of foot deformities or arthritis may make early imaging more important.

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Frequently asked questions

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What is the oblique view of the foot in Visit Clinic?plus

The oblique view of the foot is an X‑ray taken with the foot rotated about 30–45° (usually a medial oblique) to project the metatarsals, tarsal bones and joint spaces without overlap. It better demonstrates the cuboid, sinus tarsi, navicular and metatarsal shafts, helping detect fractures, dislocations, joint widening and foreign bodies. It's performed with the patient supine or seated and the central beam perpendicular to the film.

What is the oblique x-ray of the right foot in Visit Clinic?plus

An oblique X‑ray of the right foot is an angled radiograph taken with the foot rotated about 30–45° to provide a slanted view of the tarsal and metatarsal bones and joint spaces. This projection complements AP and lateral views, improving detection of fractures, dislocations, bone alignment issues, degenerative changes, and foreign bodies. The patient is positioned supine or seated with the foot rotated for the central beam.

What are the three views of the foot x-ray in Visit Clinic?plus

The three standard foot x-ray views are dorsoplantar (anteroposterior), lateral, and oblique. The dorsoplantar/AP view shows overall alignment and the forefoot; lateral demonstrates sagittal profile, arch and calcaneus; oblique highlights metatarsals and tarsometatarsal joints. Weight-bearing films are often obtained to assess functional alignment.

How to do an oblique foot xray in Visit Clinic?plus

Position the patient supine or seated with the knee flexed and the plantar surface flat on the image receptor. Rotate the entire leg medially about 30° to obtain a medial oblique. Center the beam at the base of the third metatarsal, use ≈100 cm SID, collimate toes to calcaneus, place a side marker, apply gonadal shielding, and instruct the patient to remain still during exposure.

How does foot oblique view help with diagnosis in Visit Clinic?plus

The foot oblique radiographic view provides an angled image that separates overlapping bones, improving visualization of the metatarsals, phalanges, tarsal bones and joint spaces. It complements AP and lateral views to detect fractures, dislocations, subluxations (including subtle Lisfranc injuries), small avulsion fractures, bone fragments and degenerative changes, and helps localize foreign bodies, increasing diagnostic accuracy.

What is meant by an oblique view in Visit Clinic?plus

An oblique view is an X‑ray projection taken at an angle between frontal (AP/PA) and lateral planes, with the patient or X‑ray beam rotated to partially profile structures. It reduces anatomic overlap, improving visualization of bones, joints, ribs, spine and soft-tissue detail that may be hidden on standard views. It’s described as anterior or posterior oblique based on the side nearest the receptor.