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Return to Sport After a Fracture: The Complete Protocol

13 Min. Lesezeit · Veröffentlicht 2026-05-24
Return to Sport After a Fracture: The Complete Protocol

A fracture is not the end of your season — but how you manage the return determines whether it becomes a setback or a disaster. Every year, athletes rush back from fractures and re-fracture, develop stress reactions at adjacent sites, or lose months to complications that structured return protocols prevent. This guide provides the general framework: from non-weight-bearing (NWB) through partial weight-bearing (PWB) to full weight-bearing (FWB) and sport. It then maps sport-specific protocols for triathlon, running, cycling, and HYROX. The protocol applies to most appendicular fractures (arms, legs, feet) — spinal fractures and pelvic fractures follow different pathways and require specialist guidance. This guide is for educational purposes only and does not replace medical advice. Always follow your surgeon's and physiotherapist's guidance.

The Weight-Bearing Progression: NWB → PWB → FWB

Every fracture recovery follows the same fundamental progression. The timeline varies by fracture site, severity, and management (surgical vs conservative), but the phases are universal.

PhaseDescriptionTypical DurationCriteria to Advance
NWB (Non-Weight-Bearing)No load through the fracture site. Crutches, wheelchair, or boot with no weight0–6 weeks (varies greatly)Imaging shows early callus formation, pain-free at rest
PWB (Partial Weight-Bearing)Gradual loading: 25% → 50% → 75% bodyweight through the limb2–4 weeksTolerating 75% BW without pain, imaging adequate
FWB (Full Weight-Bearing)Normal walking without assistive devices2–4 weeksNormal gait, pain-free walking 30+ min
Sport PreparationImpact loading, agility, sport-specific drills2–6 weeksFull ROM, strength >80% of uninjured side
Return to SportProgressive return to training and competition4–8 weeksFull training load tolerated, confidence, imaging confirmation

The NWB phase is where impatience causes the most damage. Bone healing is a biological process with a fixed minimum timeline — no amount of fitness, willpower, or expensive supplements accelerates it beyond what the biology allows. What you CAN control: nutrition (adequate calcium, vitamin D, protein, and total energy intake), sleep, and avoiding activities that risk re-injury.

Sport-Specific Return Protocols

Once you reach FWB and have clearance from your surgeon or physiotherapist, the return-to-sport pathway depends on the demands of your sport.

Running: The highest-impact common sport. Follow a walk/run protocol: start with 1 min run / 4 min walk for 20 minutes, every other day. Progress by reducing walk intervals and extending run intervals over 3–5 weeks. No speed work until you can run continuously for 30 minutes without pain. No racing until you have completed 3–4 weeks of full training. See the stress fracture recovery guide for the detailed phased protocol — the return-to-running progression is identical regardless of fracture type.

Cycling: Low-impact and fracture-friendly. Indoor trainer riding can often start during the PWB phase for lower-limb fractures (as long as the fracture site is not loaded by pedaling). Outdoor riding resumes at FWB for lower-limb fractures and at 6–8 weeks for upper-limb fractures (when you can safely control the bike). See the collarbone fracture guide for the most common cycling-specific fracture.

Triathlon: The multi-sport advantage: you can usually train one discipline while recovering from a fracture that affects another. Metatarsal fracture? Swim and bike. Collarbone fracture? Run and eventually bike. The return sequence is always: lowest-impact discipline first, highest-impact last. Most triathletes can target a sprint triathlon 4–8 weeks after return to full training.

HYROX: The running component follows the standard walk/run return. For the functional stations: rowing returns early (low impact), sled push/pull when lower-limb FWB is confirmed, wall balls and burpee broad jumps last (highest impact). Lunges require confidence in the affected limb under load. Target a HYROX return 6–10 weeks after full training resumes.

Clearance Decision Tree

Use this decision tree to evaluate whether you are ready for each progression. All criteria must be met before advancing.

QuestionIf YESIf NO
Is the fracture site pain-free at rest?Continue to next questionStay in current phase. Pain at rest = not healed enough
Has imaging confirmed adequate healing for the next phase?Continue to next questionWait for next imaging appointment
Can you perform the previous phase's activities without pain?Continue to next questionContinue current phase until pain-free
Do you have >80% ROM compared to the uninjured side?Continue to next questionFocus on mobility work before advancing load
Is there no swelling after the previous phase's activities?Advance to next phaseReduce volume/intensity, address swelling

This is a minimum standard. Your surgeon or physiotherapist may add sport-specific criteria (e.g., hop tests for running, single-leg balance for cycling). Always defer to their clinical judgment over any general protocol.

Cross-Training During Fracture Recovery

The goal during fracture recovery is to maintain as much fitness as possible without risking the healing bone. The cross-training options depend entirely on the fracture location.

Lower-limb fractures (foot, ankle, tibia, fibula, femur):

  • Upper body strength training: cleared immediately for most fractures
  • Core work: cleared immediately (avoid exercises that load the fracture)
  • Swimming (upper body): cleared once any surgical wound is healed
  • Pool running: cleared when NWB status allows — deep water only, no ground contact
  • Hand cycling / arm ergometer: cardiovascular maintenance without lower-limb loading

Upper-limb fractures (collarbone, arm, wrist):

  • Walking, running (once pain allows): the lower body is unaffected
  • Stationary cycling: cleared early (avoid handlebar loading for collarbone/wrist)
  • Lower body strength: squats, deadlifts, lunges — modify to avoid grip/arm loading
  • Core work: modify to avoid plank/push-up positions if wrist or arm is affected

Use the Training Load Calculator to monitor your cross-training volume and ensure you are maintaining a meaningful training stimulus throughout recovery.

Nutrition and Bone Healing

Bone healing has non-negotiable nutritional requirements. Athletes who underfuel during recovery heal slower — this is well-established in the literature on Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport (RED-S).

  • Calcium: 1000–1300mg/day from food and supplements. Dairy, fortified plant milks, leafy greens, canned fish with bones. If you are not hitting this from food, supplement
  • Vitamin D: 1000–2000 IU/day. Most athletes are insufficient, especially if training indoors during recovery. Test your levels if you have not recently
  • Protein: 1.6–2.2g/kg/day. Bone healing requires protein for collagen synthesis, and you are still training (cross-training), so muscle protein synthesis demands remain high
  • Total energy: Do NOT diet during fracture recovery. Bone healing is metabolically expensive. Cutting calories to "avoid weight gain while injured" directly impairs healing. Eat to maintenance or slight surplus
  • Avoid: Excessive alcohol (impairs osteoblast function), smoking (reduces blood flow to bone), and high-dose anti-inflammatories (NSAIDs may slow bone healing in early phases — discuss with your doctor)

The athletes who heal fastest are the ones who eat enough, sleep enough, and do not try to turn their recovery into a cutting phase.

Returning to sport after a fracture is a structured process, not a guessing game. Follow the weight-bearing progression, pass each phase's criteria before advancing, fuel the healing process, and use the sport-specific protocols to guide your return. The bone will heal. Your job is to give it the conditions to do so — and then rebuild your sport on top of that healed foundation. Let your AI training plan manage the progression back to full training at a rate your body can sustain.

Häufig gestellte Fragen

How long after a fracture can I start exercising?

It depends on the fracture location and type. Upper body exercise can often start within days of a lower-limb fracture. Cross-training that avoids the fracture site is usually encouraged as early as tolerated. Sport-specific return typically begins 6–12 weeks after the fracture, depending on location and healing progress. Your surgeon sets the timeline based on imaging.

Can I train through a fracture if the pain is manageable?

No. Unlike soft tissue injuries where some load is therapeutic, bone fractures require protection during healing. Training through a fracture risks displacement, non-union, or progression to a complete fracture. Cross-train around the injury, not through it. "Manageable pain" at a fracture site during loading means the bone is being stressed beyond what it can handle.

Will I lose all my fitness during fracture recovery?

No. With structured cross-training, most athletes maintain 85–95% of their cardiovascular fitness during 6–12 week fracture recoveries. The key is consistency — replacing your sport-specific training with appropriate alternatives (pool running, cycling, swimming, upper body work) and maintaining training volume at a level your body can handle.

How do I know when the fracture is healed enough to return to sport?

Clinical and imaging confirmation from your surgeon. A healed fracture shows bridging callus on X-ray, is pain-free with loading, and the limb has recovered adequate strength and range of motion. Do not self-clear — imaging is essential because bones can feel fine while still having incomplete structural integrity. The clearance decision tree in this guide provides the functional criteria alongside imaging.

Should I take calcium supplements to heal faster?

If your dietary calcium intake is below 1000mg/day, supplementing to reach 1000–1300mg/day is recommended. There is no evidence that mega-dosing calcium (above 1500mg/day) accelerates healing, and excessive calcium supplementation carries cardiovascular risks. Focus on food sources first, supplement the gap, and ensure adequate vitamin D (1000–2000 IU/day) for absorption.

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