X Ray Left Calcaneum Lateral View

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X Ray Left Calcaneum Lateral View
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X Ray Left Calcaneum Lateral View, in Visit Clinic

An X-ray side view of the left heel bone to look for fractures, bone spurs, or arthritis 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 Left Calcaneum Lateral View Test in Visit Clinic?

An X RAY Left CALCANEUM LATERAL VIEW is an imaging picture of the left heel bone taken from the side. It shows bone shape, alignment, and nearby joint spaces. The calcaneus supports your weight and helps with walking and running. This X-ray helps find fractures, bone spurs, arthritis, infections, or other bone changes. Doctors use it after an injury, for persistent heel pain, or to follow healing. It helps decide treatment like casting, physical therapy, or surgery. It is quick, widely available, and gives clear information about bone problems in the heel area.

X Ray Left Calcaneum Lateral View Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

X Ray Left Calcaneum Lateral View Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The X Ray Left Calcaneum Lateral View test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a X Ray Left Calcaneum Lateral View Test in Visit Clinic?

X RAY Left CALCANEUM LATERAL VIEW is usually ordered as a single musculoskeletal image when you have heel pain or after trauma. Doctors request it to check for fractures, stress injuries, bone spurs, arthritis, or infection. Abnormal findings often come from falls, sports injuries, overuse, osteoporosis, or infection. A family history of bone disease or repeat stress injuries may make this test more important.

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Frequently asked questions

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What is lateral position for calcaneus X-ray in Visit Clinic?plus

Lateral position for calcaneus X‑ray: The patient lies on the side with the affected heel nearest the image receptor (true lateral). The knee is flexed to stabilize and the ankle dorsiflexed so the foot is at 90°. The central beam is directed perpendicular to the calcaneus, centered over the subtalar joint/calcaneal tuberosity, showing the calcaneal body, tuberosity, and subtalar joint.

How to take lateral view X-ray in Visit Clinic?plus

Position the patient standing, sitting, or in lateral decubitus with the side of interest against the image receptor. Align the mid‑sagittal plane perpendicular to the receptor; ensure shoulders and hips are stacked. Center the X‑ray beam on the region of interest, collimate tightly, and use appropriate exposure settings. Instruct the patient to hold their breath and remain still; apply lead shielding and place lateral markers.

What is the centering point for a calcaneus X-ray in Visit Clinic?plus

Center the calcaneus X‑ray over the heel. For the lateral view, center the beam at the calcaneus about 1 inch (≈2.5 cm) inferior to the medial malleolus with the beam perpendicular. For the axial (plantodorsal/Harris‑Beath) view, direct the central ray cephalad ~40° to the foot’s long axis, entering the plantar surface near the base of the 3rd metatarsal and aimed at the calcaneus.

Is a lateral X-ray left or right in Visit Clinic?plus

A lateral X‑ray is a side‑view radiograph, not inherently left or right. Technically you can take either a left lateral or right lateral projection. For chest X‑rays the standard is a left lateral view (patient’s left side closest to the detector) because it reduces heart magnification and allows consistent comparison with the frontal view. Images should always be labeled to show which side.

What is the lateral calcaneus in Visit Clinic?plus

The lateral calcaneus is the outer portion of the calcaneus (heel bone). Its lateral surface includes the peroneal tubercle and attachment sites for ligaments and tendons (e.g., calcaneofibular ligament, peroneal tendons), contributes to subtalar joint articulation and lateral ankle stability, and is a common site for fractures, tendon problems, bursitis and pain after ankle injury.

How do you treat a calcaneus fracture in Visit Clinic?plus

Treat calcaneus fractures with immediate immobilization, elevation, ice, analgesia and strict non‑weight‑bearing in a splint or boot. Get X‑rays and CT; nondisplaced fractures often heal with casting/boot for ~6–10 weeks and graded weight‑bearing plus physiotherapy. Displaced or intra‑articular injuries need urgent orthopedic referral for possible surgical reduction/ORIF. Monitor for compartment syndrome, wound complications and long‑term stiffness or malunion.