The seesaw that boards loves to test. Proximal goes one way, distal goes the other.
A patient inverts their ankle and now has lateral knee pain. You palpate the fibular head — it's more prominent anteriorly. Quick: which way did the fibular head go?
Nice. Anterior fibular head — it's more prominent anteriorly because that's the direction it displaced. The common mechanism is an inversion injury (ankle rolls in → fibula gets pulled). Now here's the tricky part boards actually tests: what's happening at the OTHER end?
Not quite — if you can palpate it more anteriorly, it moved anteriorly. "More prominent" = direction of displacement. This is the most common fibular head dysfunction you'll see, and it almost always comes from an inversion injury. Let's break down why.
The Seesaw Model
This is the one concept that makes everything else click. The fibula is a seesaw — the interosseous membraneA tough fibrous sheet connecting the tibia and fibula along their entire length. It's the fulcrum of the seesaw — when one end of the fibula moves, the membrane forces the other end to move oppositely. is the fulcrum.
When the proximal fibular head goes anterior, the distal end (lateral malleolus) goes posterior. And vice versa. Always. No exceptions.
🔑Seesaw = See the opposite. Top goes left? Bottom goes right. Always.
Anterior fibular head → posterior lateral malleolus. The seesaw always balances.
💡The foot tells you the ankle, and the ankle tells you the knee. Supination (foot turned in) = anterior fibular head. Pronation (foot turned out) = posterior fibular head.🔑Supination → Seesaw tips Anterior up top. Or: "Sup? I'm up front." (anterior)
Supination vs Pronation — The Components
Boards loves asking "which motions make up supination?" This is a three-part combo for each. Think of it as a martial arts stance.
Supination = the "inward roll"
Add + Inv + PF
Adduction — foot turns in (toes point medially)
Inversion — sole faces medially (like checking your shoe sole)
Plantarflexion — foot points down (like pressing a gas pedal)
Pronation = the "outward roll"
Abd + Ev + DF
Abduction — foot turns out (toes point laterally)
Eversion — sole faces laterally (showing off your sole)
Dorsiflexion — foot pulls up (like lifting off the gas)
Board Trap
Boards gives you the distal findings (lateral malleolus position) and asks about the proximal end. Don't fall for it — seesaw rule. If they say "lateral malleolus is posterior," the fibular head is anterior. Always. They're testing whether you know the seesaw model or just memorized the proximal findings.
How to Diagnose It — Step by Step
The diagnosis is about palpation comparison. You're checking the proximal tibiofibular jointThe joint where the fibular head articulates with the lateral tibial condyle. It's a synovial plane joint with slight gliding motion. Feel it just below and lateral to the tibial plateau. and comparing both sides.
1
Palpate the Fibular Head Bilaterally
Find the fibular head on both sides. It's just below and lateral to the tibial plateau. Compare prominence — anterior vs posterior. The dysfunctional side will have a more prominent fibular head in one direction.
You palpate both fibular heads. The right one is more prominent anteriorly. What does this tell you?
Exactly. "More prominent anteriorly" = it moved anteriorly = anterior fibular head somatic dysfunction. The naming is the direction of displacement. Simple once you see it.
Nope — the naming follows the direction it moved. "More prominent anteriorly" = it's sitting more anterior than it should = anterior fibular head. The name IS the finding.
2
Check the Distal End (Confirm with Seesaw)
Palpate the lateral malleolus. If the fibular head is anterior, the malleolus should be posterior compared to the other side. This is your confirmation — if both ends point the same direction, recheck. The seesaw doesn't lie.
3
Check Foot Posture
Anterior fibular head → foot in supination (turned in, inverted, plantarflexed). Posterior → foot in pronation (turned out, everted, dorsiflexed). The foot is the third confirmation. Three clues, all saying the same thing.
Treatment — Muscle Energy
Both anterior and posterior fibular head dysfunctions use muscle energy techniqueA direct technique where you position the patient at the restrictive barrier, have them push against you (isometric contraction for 3-5 seconds), then take up the new slack. Repeat 3-5 times. The patient does the work — you just hold position and move further into the barrier after each contraction. (MET). It's a direct technique — you push toward the barrier, not away from it.
You're treating an anterior fibular head. Which direction do you push the fibular head for muscle energy?
Right. Direct technique = you go TOWARD normal. The fibular head went anterior, so you push it posterior (back to where it belongs). Then the patient pushes against you, you hold, they relax, you take up the new slack. 3-5 reps.
Direct technique means you push toward the restrictive barrier — which is the direction of normal position. The fibular head went anterior, so normal is posterior. You push it posterior. You're undoing the displacement, not pushing it further.
🧬
Anterior Fibular Head MET
1. Wrap hands around proximal fibula
2. Push fibular head posteriorly
3. Patient dorsiflexes + everts foot against your resistance (activates peroneal muscles which pull fibula posterior)
4. Hold 3-5 sec → relax → take up slack
5. Repeat 3-5 times
🧬
Posterior Fibular Head MET
1. Wrap hands around proximal fibula
2. Push fibular head anteriorly
3. Patient plantarflexes + inverts foot against your resistance (activates muscles that pull fibula anterior)
4. Hold 3-5 sec → relax → take up slack
5. Repeat 3-5 times
💡The patient's foot motion for treatment is the opposite of the dysfunction's foot posture. Anterior fibular head (supinated foot) → treat with dorsiflexion + eversion (pronation components). You're using the muscles to pull it back to normal.
Board Trap
They ask "what motion does the patient perform?" and list supination components alongside pronation components. The trick: the patient's motion is always the opposite of the dysfunctional posture. Anterior (supinated) → patient does pronation motions. Posterior (pronated) → patient does supination motions. The patient is undoing the dysfunction with their own muscles.
Clinical Vignettes
4 patients with knee or ankle complaints. Don't overthink it — the seesaw does the work for you.