Stop the cycle of repeated ankle sprains.
An ankle sprain is not just a few days of swelling and pain. Without proper rehab, balance, strength and control can remain affected.
At Flow Clinic in Wairau Valley, Auckland, we help ankle sprain patients rebuild confidence with strength rehab, proprioception training, gait retraining and return-to-sport progression.
Pain can settle before the ankle is truly ready.
Many people return to sport or work once swelling improves, but the ankle may still have deficits in proprioception, strength and reaction timing.
Balance deficit
After a sprain, the ankle’s position sense can be affected. This may increase the chance of rolling the ankle again on uneven ground.
Calf and ankle weakness
Weakness around the ankle and calf can affect push-off, landing, stairs, running and sport-specific movements.
Reduced confidence
Patients may avoid cutting, jumping, landing or uneven surfaces because the ankle still feels unstable or unreliable.
Good ankle rehab is more than band exercises.
Band strengthening can be useful, but recurrent ankle sprains often need a broader plan. The ankle needs strength, balance, proprioception, calf capacity, hip control and progressive return to real movement.
At Flow Clinic, ankle rehab is progressed based on pain, range of motion, swelling, walking tolerance, balance, strength and activity goals.
- Ankle range of motion assessment
- Calf strength and heel raise testing
- Single-leg balance and proprioception training
- Landing, hopping and return-to-sport progression
- Brace or orthotic advice when clinically appropriate
Flow Clinic ankle sprain rehab process.
A structured plan to reduce pain, restore confidence and lower the risk of repeated sprains.
Assess the injury
We assess swelling, pain location, ligament tenderness, range of motion, walking tolerance and functional limitations.
Restore movement
Early rehab may include swelling control, range of motion, gait support, taping, brace advice and safe loading.
Rebuild control
Balance, calf strength, ankle strengthening, hip control and proprioception work are progressed as symptoms allow.
Return to sport
Later rehab may include hopping, landing, running, cutting and sport-specific drills based on goals and ankle tolerance.
When to book ankle rehab.
An assessment is useful when pain, swelling, instability or reduced confidence is affecting walking, work, running or sport.
Recent ankle sprain
Early assessment can help confirm the likely injury severity, manage load and begin safe rehab progression.
Repeated rolling episodes
Recurrent ankle sprains often suggest a need for balance, strength and neuromuscular retraining.
Return-to-sport concerns
If the ankle feels unstable during running, jumping, landing or cutting, a structured return plan is recommended.
Questions about ankle sprain rehab.
Simple answers before booking ankle sprain rehab at Flow Clinic.
Do I need rehab if my ankle pain has improved?
Often yes. Pain can improve before balance, strength and reaction timing have fully recovered. This is one reason repeated sprains can happen.
Can I claim ACC for an ankle sprain?
Many acute ankle sprains may be eligible for ACC injury care. Eligibility depends on the injury mechanism and claim details.
Should I wear an ankle brace?
A brace can be helpful in some cases, especially during early return to sport or higher-risk activity. It should usually be combined with rehab.
How long does ankle sprain recovery take?
Recovery time depends on injury severity, swelling, stability, strength, sport demands and previous injury history. Assessment gives a clearer plan.
Rolled your ankle or keep spraining it?
Book an ankle sprain rehab assessment at Flow Clinic in Wairau Valley. We will assess the injury, explain the likely recovery pathway and build a clear rehab plan.