Metatarsal stress fractures, particularly of the second and third metatarsals, account for a meaningful share of bone stress injuries in runners. The 2015 retrospective study by Mallee in BJSM put the metatarsals at roughly 9 percent of all running-related stress fractures, with the second metatarsal the most common single site. The mistakes that cause these injuries are reasonably well-mapped in the literature. They are also, in my reading of the data, largely preventable.
This article identifies the training and behavioural patterns most strongly associated with metatarsal stress fractures in runners. The aim is not to alarm, but to give you a checklist you can audit your own training against, particularly if you are building toward a marathon in the Indian winter race season.
Mistake 1: the training-load spike
The single most consistent finding across the running injury literature is that sudden increases in weekly volume or intensity precede most overuse injuries. The 2016 work by Gabbett in BJSM on acute-to-chronic workload ratios, while specific numerical thresholds remain debated, supports the broader principle that an acute-to-chronic ratio above 1.5 elevates injury risk in multiple sports including running.
For metatarsal stress fractures specifically, the 2014 cohort study by Hreljac on running gait and injury linked sudden volume increases to forefoot bone stress in particular, because the forefoot is the load-bearing region during the late stance and push-off phases of running.
What the spike usually looks like
In the Indian context, the typical spike pattern aligns with the November-to-March race calendar. A runner who has held 40 to 50 kilometres per week through the monsoon abruptly climbs to 65 or 70 kilometres in mid-September, in preparation for the Tata Mumbai Marathon or the Vedanta Delhi Half. The body, particularly the bony tissues, does not adapt at that rate. The metatarsals are among the first to flag the imbalance.
The 10 percent rule for weekly volume progression is a reasonable practical guideline, though the underlying physiological basis is more nuanced than the rule suggests. The principle to internalise is that bone adaptation takes longer than cardiovascular adaptation. You can build aerobic capacity in eight weeks; you cannot rebuild bone density in eight weeks.
Mistake 2: ignoring the warning shots
Stress fractures rarely arrive without warning. The 2013 systematic review by Warden in JOSPT identified a near-universal prodromal phase of localised dull pain, often dismissed by the runner as fatigue or general soreness. The pain typically begins as an end-of-run or after-run discomfort, progresses to mid-run discomfort, and finally becomes a start-of-run pain that the runner can no longer ignore.
By the time pain is present from the first kilometre, the bone has progressed from a stress reaction to a stress fracture, and the imaging will reflect it. The window between the first prodromal pain and the established fracture is typically two to four weeks of continued running through symptoms.
The localisation pattern
Metatarsal stress fractures characteristically produce pain over the dorsum of the forefoot, around the middle third of the affected metatarsal. The pain is point-specific, not diffuse. A useful self-test is firm pressure on the dorsum of each metatarsal shaft. A clearly more painful spot on one bone, particularly if the contralateral foot is non-painful at the equivalent location, is a clinical signal that warrants assessment by a sports physician before the next training session.
Mistake 3: footwear churn
The relationship between footwear and stress fracture risk is not as cleanly mapped as runners often assume, but specific patterns recur. The 2018 work by Hannigan and Pollard in JOSPT examined transitions in footwear stack height and reported elevated forefoot loading in the period immediately following a switch to lower stack or more flexible shoes.
The practical pattern that drives metatarsal injuries in my reading of the data is sudden transitions between substantially different shoes. A runner accustomed to a high-stack carbon-plated trainer who switches abruptly to a minimalist trainer for two or three sessions a week, without progressive adaptation, exposes the metatarsals to loading patterns they have not been conditioned for.
Carbon plate considerations
The carbon-plated super-shoe category has changed the racing landscape since 2017. The published data on injury risk specific to these shoes is still emerging. A 2022 narrative review by Burns and Tam in Sports Medicine concluded that the metatarsals may be at modestly elevated risk in runners who use carbon-plated shoes for a high proportion of training mileage, because the stiffer plate alters the forefoot loading pattern. The conservative interpretation is to reserve carbon-plated shoes for race-specific sessions and races themselves, not as everyday trainers.
Mistake 4: low energy availability
The relationship between low energy availability (LEA) and bone stress injury is one of the more strongly supported findings in the modern running literature. The 2014 IOC consensus statement on relative energy deficiency in sport (RED-S) describes the multi-system effects of sustained energy deficit, including reduced bone mineral density and impaired bone remodelling.
For Indian runners, the LEA pattern often appears in two specific contexts. First, ambitious training volumes layered onto vegetarian or vegan diets that have not been carefully planned for caloric and protein adequacy. Second, deliberate weight loss attempts during training, which produce a double burden of increased energy demand and reduced energy intake.
The biomarkers worth checking
A baseline blood panel after a stress fracture should include vitamin D, ferritin, and a basic metabolic profile. Vitamin D deficiency is more common in Indian runners than the climate would suggest, because most weekday running happens before sunrise or after sunset, and the seasonal pollution in many metros further reduces effective UVB exposure. Costs in metro cities for the relevant panel typically sit in the eight hundred to fifteen hundred rupee range.
For women runners, menstrual function is a useful clinical indicator of energy availability. Loss of regular cycles is associated with reduced bone density and elevated stress fracture risk; the relationship is bidirectional in that bone protection and menstrual function both depend on adequate energy availability.
Mistake 5: ignoring the biomechanics
Specific gait patterns are associated with elevated metatarsal loading. The 2014 systematic review by Almonroeder in JOSPT identified increased plantarflexion at footstrike, reduced step rate, and increased anterior centre-of-mass position as features associated with higher forefoot loading.
A 2-D gait analysis with a qualified sports physiotherapist can identify the relevant features for an individual runner. The cost in Indian metros typically ranges from three to seven thousand rupees, depending on the facility. Cadence work is one of the more accessible biomechanical interventions; the 2011 work by Heiderscheit in Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise demonstrated reduced impact loading at higher step rates, though the optimal cadence varies by individual.
The exercise programme that complements the running
Strength work for the foot intrinsics, calf complex, and hip stabilisers is supported by reasonable evidence as part of an injury-prevention programme for runners. The specific exercises sit in our exercises library. The broader framework for managing the load-recovery balance is in the recovery guides.
What this means for your training plan
A defensible training plan for the Indian race season respects the bone adaptation timeline. Build base volume in the monsoon months at a manageable rate. Limit weekly volume increases to roughly 10 percent. Maintain footwear continuity through the build, with carbon-plated shoes reserved for race-specific work. Monitor for prodromal pain. Address energy availability proactively, particularly during high-volume blocks.
For the broader treatment of running injuries, the injuries hub is the entry point. The Running Lab covers race-specific guides for the Indian calendar. If you are rebuilding a plan after a stress reaction or stress fracture, the STRIDD plan generator can build a load-managed plan that respects the adaptation windows the published evidence describes. The data on what causes these injuries is reasonably clear. The mistakes are, in most cases, avoidable.