Running Injuries in Edinburgh

Running injury physiotherapy enquiries in Edinburgh for training-load symptoms, knee, calf, ankle and return-to-running questions.

Running Injuries: prepare a useful rehab enquiry

Running injury physiotherapy enquiries in Edinburgh for training-load symptoms, knee, calf, ankle and return-to-running questions. This page helps patients explain the practical details a physiotherapy practice needs before an assessment or rehab conversation.

Best for

  • training-load symptoms, running-related knee, calf, ankle, hip and return-to-running questions
  • Patients with activity, sport, work or everyday movement goals
  • Rehab questions where symptom timing, load and previous advice matter

Details to include

  • Body area, activity involved and when symptoms started
  • What movement, sport, work task or daily activity is currently limited
  • Any swelling, instability, weakness, stiffness or confidence issue
  • Relevant history, surgery date, imaging or written guidance if applicable
  • Edinburgh area, access needs, preferred timing and contact details

Related injury rehab pages

FAQs

Quick answers before you request physiotherapy help.

What is running injuries useful for?

Running Injuries is suited to training-load symptoms, running-related knee, calf, ankle, hip and return-to-running questions. Include your Edinburgh area and the activity or movement you want to return to.

Can I ask about rehab as a new patient?

Use the enquiry form to share that you are new to the practice and what injury, operation or activity goal you want to discuss.

What should I mention before a visit?

Mention the body area, symptom timing, activity level, relevant clinical history and any exercises or advice you have already been given.

Can I ask about returning to sport or work?

Yes. Include the sport, job or everyday activity involved and what currently limits you.

Which related service should I consider?

For broader sports issues, use sports injury physio. For pain not linked to running, use pain and mobility.

Tell us what is happening

Answer a few focused questions about the appointment type, body area, symptoms and contact details.

Step 1 of 1