Ankle CARs
Controlled Articular Rotations for the talocrural and subtalar joints.
Biomechanics Deep Dive
Kinetic Chain & Vectors
The movement isolates the talocrural (responsible for sagittal plane dorsiflexion/plantarflexion) and subtalar (responsible for frontal/transverse plane inversion/eversion) joints.
Path Geometry: The foot traces a path of Dorsiflexion → Inversion → Plantarflexion → Eversion strictly distal to the malleoli.
Pivot Points & Constraints
Primary rotation occurs at the talus within the mortise. The critical biomechanical constraint is the tibial tuberosity, which must remain fixed to prevent proximal rotation (tibial internal/external rotation).
Constraint Physics: By blocking the tibia, we force torque (τ) to express exclusively at the ankle complex rather than dissipating up the chain into the knee.
Stabilization Requirements
A 'Chokehold' grip under the knee is essential. The hand must palpate the tibial crest to tactilely block rotation. Intermediate execution requires systemic irradiation (30–50% tension) to lock the hip and knee in space, creating a rigid base for the distal lever to move against.
Muscle Map
Tibialis Anterior
Primary mover for dorsiflexion and inversion. Active during the "up and in" phase of the rotation.
Gastrocnemius & Soleus
Primary movers for plantarflexion. The Tibialis Posterior assists heavily in plantarflexion combined with inversion.
Fibularis Longus & Brevis
Primary movers for eversion (turning the sole outwards). Crucial for lateral ankle stability.
Execution Protocol
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1
Setup Position
Sit on the floor. Thread one arm under the working leg's knee in a "chokehold" grip to isolate the thigh. Place the other hand on the shin (tibia) to monitor and prevent rotation.
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2
Irradiation
Generate 30% full-body tension. Squeeze the bicep holding the leg and actively root the heel of the non-working leg into the ground.
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3
Dorsiflexion
Pull the toes and foot straight up towards the shin as far as possible without engaging the toes excessively.
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4
Inversion (Internal Rotation)
While maintaining dorsiflexion, turn the sole of the foot inward. Imagine trying to show your sole to the opposite knee.
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5
Plantarflexion
Maintain the inward turn (inversion) and begin to point the foot down like a ballerina. Reach for the floor.
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6
Eversion (External Rotation)
While fully pointed (plantarflexed), sweep the foot outwards. Turn the sole away from the midline.
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7
Return to Start
Maintain the outward turn (eversion) and pull the foot back up into dorsiflexion to complete one full revolution.
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8
Reverse
Pause, then retrace the path in the exact opposite direction (Dorsiflexion → Eversion → Plantarflexion → Inversion).
Common Mistakes
| Mistake | Correction | Consequence |
|---|---|---|
| Tibial Rotation | Palpate the shin bone; ensure the logo on your sock doesn't turn. | Torque leaks into the knee; fails to isolate the ankle capsule. |
| Toe Leading | Keep toes relaxed; drive movement from the ankle/heel. | False range of motion created by toe extensors rather than ankle movers. |
| Cutting Corners | Draw the largest possible circle at the outer limits of motion. | Reduces mechanotransduction signaling to the joint capsule tissue. |