🦶 Rolled or Sprained Ankle in Surprise, AZ? Get a clear plan this week.
✓ Same-week appointments ✓ In-office imaging ✓ Medicare & major plans accepted
5.0 stars from 52 patients Dr. David Bates, DPM · Practicing since 2003
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Same business day callbacks Mon–Fri. No referral required.
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Whether it just happened or it's been six months — get a real evaluation, not a guess. Same business day callbacks Monday through Friday.
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🦶 Why So Many Ankle Sprains Become Chronic
The most common reason ankles keep rolling is that the first sprain was never properly rehabilitated. The ligament stretches and heals — but the balance receptors and the small stabilizing muscles around the joint don't recover automatically. Without targeted rehab, the ankle stays slightly less reliable than it was — and rolls again the next time you step off a curb.
🩺 What Dr. Bates Treats
- Acute ankle sprains — grade 1, 2, and 3 lateral ankle sprains, with imaging when fracture is suspected.
- Chronic ankle instability — the "trick ankle" that keeps rolling. Diagnosis and a real rehab plan.
- Ankle fractures — diagnosis, casting/booting, and surgical referral when needed.
- Peroneal tendon injury — common companion to chronic ankle sprains.
- High ankle sprains (syndesmotic injury) — different from regular sprains, often need longer protection.
- Ankle arthritis — post-traumatic and degenerative.
- Achilles ruptures — diagnosis and surgical referral when indicated.
- Foot stress fractures — often missed on first imaging; high suspicion in runners and athletes.
🧪 What to Expect at Your Visit
Dr. Bates examines the ankle, takes in-office X-rays when indicated, and gives you a clear answer: what's injured, how severe, what the recovery timeline looks like, and what you should and shouldn't do in the meantime. If a brace is needed, he'll fit one. If physical therapy is the right next step, he'll prescribe it with specific goals.
🏃 Return to Activity
For active patients, the question isn't just "will it heal" but "when can I run, hike, lift, or play again." Dr. Bates builds a phased return-to-activity plan so you don't re-injure the same ankle six weeks in.
📍 Ankle Care for Surprise, Sun City, Peoria, Glendale
Heelex sits on Bola Drive in Surprise — convenient for patients across Sun City, Sun City West, Peoria, Glendale, El Mirage, Youngtown, Litchfield Park, Goodyear, and Avondale. Walk-in appointments often available for acute injuries.
Frequently Asked Questions
I rolled my ankle yesterday. Do I need to be seen?
It depends on severity. If you can't bear weight, the ankle is significantly swollen or deformed, or pain is severe, get evaluated quickly — there could be a fracture. Mild sprains often resolve at home with rest, ice, compression, and elevation — but if pain or instability persists past a week, come in.
Why does my ankle keep rolling?
Repeat ankle sprains are usually caused by incompletely-rehabbed ligaments, weakness in the small stabilizing muscles, or proprioceptive (balance) deficits from prior injury. Dr. Bates can identify the underlying cause and prescribe a targeted rehab program — bracing alone is rarely the full answer.
How long does an ankle sprain take to heal?
Grade 1 (mild) sprains heal in 1–2 weeks. Grade 2 (moderate) sprains take 4–6 weeks. Grade 3 (severe, complete ligament tear) sprains can take 8–12 weeks and sometimes need bracing or surgery. The biggest predictor of full recovery is doing a proper rehab program, not just waiting it out.
Should I get an MRI for my ankle?
Most ankle sprains don't need an MRI. X-ray is the first imaging when fracture is suspected. MRI is reserved for cases with persistent pain, suspected ligament tears, or pre-surgical planning — Dr. Bates orders one when it will actually change the treatment plan.
Do I need a referral?
No. Call (623) 270-7441 to schedule. Same-week appointments available for acute and chronic ankle injuries.