X Ray Right Heel Axial and View

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X Ray Right Heel Axial and View
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X Ray Right Heel Axial and View, in Visit Clinic

An X-ray of the right heel to check bones, fractures, bone spurs, and causes of heel pain 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 Right Heel Axial and View Test in Visit Clinic?

An X-ray Right Heel Axial and View produces X-ray images of the right heel bone and nearby joints. It shows bone shape, alignment, and any breaks or bony growths. The heel supports your weight and helps you walk, so checking its bones is important after injury or with ongoing pain. This test helps detect fractures, bone spurs, arthritis, infections, and some tumors. Doctors use it to confirm a diagnosis after a fall, guide treatment like casting or surgery, and to monitor healing over time. The axial view gives a specific angle to see the underside and back of the heel, which can reveal problems not seen on standard views. It is quick and uses low radiation.

X Ray Right Heel Axial and View Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

X Ray Right Heel Axial and View Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The X Ray Right Heel Axial and View test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a X Ray Right Heel Axial and View Test in Visit Clinic?

X Ray Right Heel Axial and View is normally ordered as part of musculoskeletal imaging for heel pain or injury. Doctors request it when you have trauma, persistent pain, swelling, difficulty walking, or suspected fracture. It helps diagnose breaks, bone spurs, arthritis, infection, or other bone problems. Abnormal findings often come from accidents, repetitive stress, degenerative change, or infection. A family history of bone disorders or early arthritis can make this test more important.

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Frequently asked questions

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What is the axial view of the calcaneus X-ray in Visit Clinic?plus

The axial (Harris-Beath or plantodorsal) view of the calcaneus is an X-ray taken with the beam directed cephalad through the heel to project the calcaneal tuberosity, posterior facet, sustentaculum tali, calcaneal body and subtalar joint. It evaluates calcaneal fractures, heel width, Bohler’s angle and spurs. Typically obtained with the foot dorsiflexed and the beam angled about 35–45° to the foot’s long axis.

What is the X-ray view for heel pain in Visit Clinic?plus

The standard X‑ray views for heel pain are a true lateral and an axial (Harris/Beath) calcaneal view, often performed weight‑bearing when plantar fasciitis or alignment issues are suspected. These views assess fractures, calcaneal spurs, and heel alignment; additional foot AP/oblique views or CT/MRI may be obtained if X‑rays are inconclusive or for complex injuries.

How to take Harris' axial view in Visit Clinic?plus

For the Harris axial (Harris–Beath) view of the calcaneus, position the patient prone with the foot dorsiflexed so the plantar surface is vertical and the heel over the cassette. Direct the central ray 40–45° cephalad from the plantar surface through the calcaneus onto the detector. Collimate to the heel, suspend movement, and include the subtalar joint to assess fractures and Bohler’s angle.

What is the X-ray of the back of the heel in Visit Clinic?plus

An X‑ray of the back of the heel (lateral calcaneal view) images the calcaneus and Achilles insertion. It detects fractures, bone spurs (Haglund deformity), calcifications at the Achilles insertion, apophysitis in adolescents and alignment or degenerative changes. X‑rays are quick and good for bone assessment but may miss soft‑tissue problems; MRI or ultrasound can be used if tendon injury is suspected.

What does axial mean in X-ray in Visit Clinic?plus

Axial in X‑ray refers to images obtained along or around the body’s long axis, typically producing cross‑sectional (transverse) views. These axial projections slice the body head‑to‑toe, letting clinicians visualize internal structures without overlapping anatomy. Common in CT and some X‑ray projections, axial images help assess bones, organs, and pathological changes in a plane perpendicular to the body's vertical axis.

What are the 4 views of the ankle X-ray in Visit Clinic?plus

The four standard ankle X‑ray views are: anteroposterior (AP), mortise (AP with 15–20° internal rotation to open the ankle mortise and tibiofibular joint), lateral (true lateral to show talus, calcaneus and alignment), and oblique (typically 45° medial oblique to profile the fibula and joint). These views assess fractures, joint space, alignment and syndesmotic injury.