Understanding the Most Common Dance Injuries and How Physiotherapy Can Help

Understanding the Most Common Dance Injuries and How Physiotherapy Can Help explores targeted strategies for recovery. Discover new paths to mobility, healing, and personalized care.

Ankle Sprains

What it is: A stretch or tear of the ligaments, often from rolling the ankle during jumps or turns.

Common in: Ballet, contemporary, jazz

Physiotherapy can help by:

Reducing swelling and pain with manual therapy and modalities

Restoring balance and proprioception

Rebuilding ankle strength and stability

Progressively reintroducing jump and turn mechanics

?? Goal: Prevent chronic instability or future sprains.

?? 2. Shin Splints (Medial Tibial Stress Syndrome)

What it is: Pain along the inner edge of the shinbone caused by repetitive stress.

Common in: Ballet, hip hop, tap

Physiotherapy can help by:

Identifying faulty biomechanics and improper footwear

Modifying training loads

Strengthening the lower leg and foot muscles

Improving shock absorption and landing techniques

?? Goal: Relieve pain and prevent progression to stress fractures.

?? 3. Stress Fractures

What it is: Small cracks in bones due to repetitive overuse and insufficient recovery.

Common sites: Foot (metatarsals), shin, hip

Physiotherapy can help by:

Guiding gradual return-to-dance protocols

Addressing nutritional, hormonal, or load management factors

Strengthening surrounding muscles to reduce bone load

Teaching load distribution techniques

?? Goal: Promote safe healing and avoid reinjury.

?? 4. Patellofemoral Pain Syndrome (Dancer’s Knee)

What it is: Pain at the front of the knee due to poor tracking of the kneecap.

Common causes: Weak hips, poor alignment in pliés, overuse

Physiotherapy can help by:

Realigning knee mechanics through glute and quad strengthening

Improving core and pelvic control

Taping or bracing if needed

Teaching proper knee alignment during movement

?? Goal: Restore pain-free plié, jump, and floor work.

?? 5. Hip Impingement (FAI) and Labral Tears

What it is: Pinching pain in the hip due to abnormal bone shape or labral damage.

Common in: Ballet dancers doing extreme turnout and extensions

Physiotherapy can help by:

Improving hip joint mobility

Strengthening stabilizers like the glute medius

Teaching turnout control and pelvic stability

Modifying dance movements during rehab

?? Goal: Reduce joint stress while maintaining turnout function.

?? 6. Achilles Tendinopathy

What it is: Overuse injury to the Achilles tendon, common in dancers who jump or relevé frequently.

Physiotherapy can help by:

Providing progressive loading programs

Teaching eccentric strengthening techniques

Addressing calf muscle tightness and foot mechanics

Using heel lifts or taping during painful phases

?? Goal: Build tendon resilience and reduce pain during pointe work and jumps.

?? 7. Back Pain (Lumbar Strain or Hyperlordosis)

What it is: Pain from muscular imbalance, poor core control, or overextension of the lower back.

Common in: Ballet, contemporary, acro

Physiotherapy can help by:

Teaching deep core activation (transversus abdominis)

Correcting posture and spinal alignment

Relieving muscle tension with manual therapy

Improving hamstring and hip flexor flexibility

?? Goal: Create a strong, flexible spine for arabesques, backbends, and safe turns.

?? 8. Muscle Strains (Hamstrings, Adductors, Calves)

What it is: Stretching or tearing of muscle fibers, often due to overstretching or fatigue.

Physiotherapy can help by:

Managing inflammation and pain

Rebuilding strength and flexibility gradually

Teaching safe stretching and warm-up strategies

Using massage, ultrasound, or dry needling

?? Goal: Prevent scar tissue buildup and reinjury.

?? Beyond Treatment: How Physiotherapy Prevents Injuries

Movement screening to identify risks before they become injuries

Prehabilitation programs to strengthen weak areas

Technique correction for safer execution of dance moves

Load management to balance training, rehearsal, and recovery

Education on rest, hydration, and recovery tools

?? Sample Injury Prevention Physio Routine

Component Examples

Warm-Up Dynamic pliés, hip openers, calf raises

Core Work Dead bug, bird dog, side planks

Hip Strength Clamshells, monster walks with resistance band

Balance Single-leg relevés, wobble board work

Flexibility Hamstring and calf mobility

Recovery Foam rolling, ice/heat as needed

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