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Showing posts with label inserts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inserts. Show all posts

Sunday, October 19, 2014

Top Ten Reasons Why Your Feet Hurt - And How To Alleviate The Pain!

Ten Reasons Why Your Feet Hurt -
And How To Alleviate The Pain. 



1. You're walking barefoot. 
I don't care what any of the minimalist enthusiasts claim - if you are having foot pain then you need to eliminate barefoot walking from your life! Podiatrists make money by removing foriegn bodies such as glass or cactus spines from the bottom of people's feet. Not to mention warts, which are a virus and can live on floor surfaces for days - just waiting for you to walk barefoot so the virus can find a new home to thrive in - your feet! Warts can be painful, they are ugly and they can be expensive and time consuming for you to treat. Walking barefoot is the perfect way to get heel pain (plantar fasciitis), tendonitis, broken toes and encourage the development of bunions and hammertoes - just to name a few. 

The Fix: In the house, instead of barefoot, try wearing RX Crocs Ultimate Cloud or RX Crocs Relief. Other options are the Orthoheel Diabetic Slippers, which you can purchase online or Birkenstock sandals. You can use the 20% discount coupon in the upper right hand of this blog to order the Crocs. They only come in even sizes so order up a half or whole size. If your toes hit the front of the Crocs then they are too small. If they feel too big, that is okay. Wear the strap to the back so your feet stay in and remember that they are used as a bedroom slipper until you can put on your better shoes. You will not believe how much better your feet feel!


2. You're wearing flimsy flip-flops.
Flimsy flip flops offer no support or protection to your feet. They will help to prevent picking up warts and some foreign bodies, but they flimsy flip-flops can put you at risk of developing fractures, tendonitis, heel pain, bunions and hammertoes. 

The Fix: If you are a hardcore flip-flop fan - at the very least upgrade to the Fit-Flop flip-flop, which is one of the better ones. In my opinion, there are no good flip-flops and I do not recommend wearing flip-flops of any type, but consider the Fit-Flop flip-flop your 'gateway drug' to getting into better shoegear. 


3. You're wearing bedroom slippers that are too flexible. 
Flimsy bedroom slippers offer little to no biomechanical control for your feet and ankles. If you have any conditions such as osteoarthritis or rheumatoid arthritis or pain of any type in your feet - everytime your flexible bedroom slipper puts motion through that area of pain - you are aggravating the condition. 

The Fix: I recommend the RX Crocs Ultimate Cloud, the RX Crocs Relief, the Orthoheel Diabetic Slipper, or Birkenstock sandals to wear in the house as a bedroom slipper. 

4. You're walking around your house wearing only socks. 
Socks might protect you from warts, but that is about it. Once again, walking around in socks offers no support or biomechanical control to your feet, ankles, knees, hip or lower back and makes you prone to all sorts of injuries. I would estimate that twenty percent of my business comes from injuries sustained as the patient walks between the bed and bathroom at night when they are going to the bathroom. 

The Fix: I recommend the RX Crocs Ultimate Cloud, the RX Crocs Relief, the Orthoheel Diabetic Slipper or Birkenstock sandals. Even if you get up to go to the bathroom in the middle of the night - wear your RX Crocs. 

5. You have an underlying medical issue that is causing foot pain. 
There are many medical conditions that cause foot pain. Diabetes can cause nerve damage (neuropathy) pain in the feet that can feel like your feet are numb. The sensation of numbness can be excrutiating. Other sensations caused by neuropathy pain are if your feet feel like you have ace wraps wrapped tightly around your feet or if you feel like you are walking on sponges or if you feel like ants are biting your feet. There are many variations of neuropathy pain. Other diseases that can cause foot pain are fibromyalgia, chronic regional pain syndrome, gout, rheumatoid arthritis, varicose veins and peripheral arterial disease (poor circulation). 

The Fix: First, go to your primary care physician on a regular basis. If you have not been to a doctor in over a year, make an appointment with your primary care physician for a full physical. If you do have an underlying disease such as diabetes the most important thing is to get a proper diagnosis and proper treatment to get the disease under control. High blood sugars cause damage to the nerve, which results in nerve damage. Undiagnosed diabetes also takes a terrible toll on your eyes and can lead to blindness. The key to a healthy life is to get diagnosed with your disease early so you can spend the rest of your life medically managing the disease. I know that does not sound like fun, but it sure beats the alternative! Second, follow up with a podiatrist in your area. There are many things that podiatrists can do to help control the foot pain that is caused by various diseases.  


6. You're walking around with an undiagnosed fracture in your foot. 
If you are walking around with a dull, aching, constant pain (like a toothache) that rates at a four on a scale of zero (no pain) to ten (excrutiating pain), then there is a very good chance that you are walking around on an undiagnosed fracture. People assume that if you break a bone in your foot that you have horrible pain and you can't walk and although this can be true, it is more common to have a dull, low grade, constant ache in your foot that is often an untreated stress fracture. 

The Fix: Make an appointment with your local podaitrist who will do a full examination, take x-rays and properly treat the fracture. A  fracture usually takes six weeks to heal. Stop limping around and go get x-rays and get it properly treated so you can get back to having fun!

7. You work retail.
We are surrounded by concrete! Constant repetitive micro-trauma on a hard, unyeilding surface can be brutal on the feet. Even with the best shoes, careers in retail are tough on the feet, knees, hip and lower back. 

The Fix: If you can wear tennis shoes at work, get the New Balance 928 or 1540. If you have to wear black shoes, you can purchase the NB 928 in black leather. If you have to wear something a little dressier, try the Dansko Professional Clogs (wear the ones with rearfoot control). For more dress shoe options, please refer to my blog articles: Top 25 Comfortable dress shoes list' and 'Top 25 comfortable boot lists'. Scroll through my blog as I created it as a resource for my patients to find good looking shoes that are good for their feet and are pathology specific. Yes, there are some ugly shoes, but keep looking - there are tons of options and when you find something you like, google the shoe to see what stores carry it and go try it on. If it feels great, then get it. If it doesn't feel great, keep looking. If nothing feels good, then you need an appointment with your local podiatrist because there may be something else going on - like a stress fracture or an underlying systemic problem that can be treated. 


8. You have 'biomechanically challenged' feet. 
This is my own term and what it means is that you were born with a genetic biomechanical structure to your feet that, if you do not wear proper shoes and arch support throughout your life, then you are destined to at some point in your life hit a 'tipping point' where you start developing foot, knee, hip or lower back pain. Detroit car manufacturers have robots that slam the car door over and over again so that they can determine at what point the car door hinge breaks. Think of your forefoot joints as a 'hinge'. It is logical to realize that all hinges have a number where they start to wear out and break down. In medicine we call this 'osteoarthritis', which is a fancy way of saying that the joint and the joint cartilage is damaged. The good news is that if you do have an underlying foot structure such as flat feet or functional hallux limitus, then you can go to your local podiatrist and get the proper diagnosis and treatment. In my opinion, ninety-nine percent of biomechanically challenged feet can be controlled by proper shoes and inserts, which will help to stop or slow the progression of you developing foot problems and pain. 

The Fix: Make an appointment with your podaitrist to have a biomechanical evaluation with x-rays. I like it when my patients bring in one bag of shoes that they wear most often so I can evaluate if their shoegear is appropriate for their foot type. For more information, please refer to my article on this blog entitled 'My feet hurt: top ten things to do to alleviate foot pain' or 'Shoe recommendations for patients recovering from a Lisfranc's injury'. 
In a nutshell, wear RX Crocs Ultimate Cloud in the house as a bedroom slipper, purchase the New Balance 928 or 1540 and wear arch support such as a custom-molded insert or a good over-the-counter insert from your podiatrist. This will work quite well for eightly percent of people. If you do all this and are still having foot pain, make an appointment with your podiatrist. 

9. You are compensating when you walk because you are having knee, hip and lower back pain. 
If you are limping or compensating for any reason, then you are causing problems. It's a domino effect! No one has a perfect gait and to some degree we all compensate when we walk, but if you are limping because of knee, hip or lower back pain for more than three to seven days - all you are doing is learning how to limp. When you see geriatric patients walking with walkers and canes - that did not happen overnight. It can be a slow, insidious process that is years in the making. If you are limping around and telling yourself, "Oh, it'll get better", then you are probably fooling yourself. All you are doing is learning how to compensate, which leads to wear and tear of your joint and more limping. 

The Fix: If you are limping or in pain due to knee, hip or lower back pain for more than three to seven days, make an appointment with your primary care physician or an orthopedic specialist to get an evaluation, x-rays and proper treatment. Nip it in the bud! I had an eighty-two year old lady with chronic pain in both feet for twenty years before she made an appointment with a doctor. I was the first doctor she ever saw for her foot pain. We took x-rays and she had been walking around on a clearly seen stress fracture of the 2nd metatarsal for twenty years! With proper treatment, we had her back in proper shoes and inserts with minimal pain within eight weeks. After she was healed, I sent her to physical therapy for 'gait re-training' so she could learn how to walk more normally.

10. Genetics.
Foot problems are usually caused by what I call the big three: genetics, trauma and poor shoegear. Foot issues such as bunions, hallux limitus, hypermobility and flat feet (to name a few) can be genetic and run in families. Genetic foot problems can also skip a generation. So, just because your parents never had any foot problems, that doesn't mean that you didn't have a grandparent with the same foot type. 

The Fix: Ask your parents and grandparents if they ever had foot pain. If they did have foot pain, you probably already know all about it because they probably have been quite vocal about the pain at the end of the day! Check your children's feet. If you are having foot pain then there is a good chance that your children have the same foot type that can lead to the same foot problems that you have. The wonderful thing is that it is a golden opportunity for you to get your children into proper shoes and arch support early so that hopefully they don't develop problems as they get older. You could potentially save them knee, hip and lower back problems also! 

Also, Excessive Weight. 
I dislike talking about this one because it is so obvious and people already know if they need to lose weight. I would like to say that if your feet hurt then it becomes hard to exercise, which can cause you to gain weight. If you are gaining or have already gained weight because your feet hurt and you are unable to exercise, it is very important that you get treated for your foot pain so you can return to your exercise regime. It's a vicious cycle: foot pain leads to less exercise, which leads to more weight gain, which leads to more pressure on the feet and more foot pain, which leads to "I can't exercise because my feet hurt worse", which leads to depression and increased risk of diabetes, which leads to  more weight gain - and the vicious cycle continues. 

My Professional Mantra: My job as your podiatrist is to keep you as active as possible for as long as possible with less injuries so that you see less doctors, including me. This goal can be achieved by making sure that you are in proper shoegear and inserts and change some simple habits. I have based my private podiatry practice on these concepts and they work. I no longer have to perform surgery as I can treat the vast majority of foot pain with conservative, non-surgical treatment. Give it a try for four weeks and you judge for yourself. 



I hope that this was helpful! 

If you have any 'limpers' in your life, I would love it if you could share my blog with them through social media or just good old fashioned word of mouth. 

Also, if you are into detective stories, check out my latest novel 'Gunning For Angels', which is available on Amazon for Kindle or in paperback. 


Thank you for reading!


Dr. Cathleen A. McCarthy


:)








Saturday, August 4, 2012

Podiatry Review of the John Fluevog Hi Wedge Dawn & Prepares Merit...

John Fluevog:

A Review of 

Two Fabulous High Heels

For Women Who Know They Can Wear Heels! 
 




John Fluevog Hi Wedge Dawn
$159


Be still my heart! 
I love John Fluevog shoes and I adore the look of the Hi Wedge Dawn.
I personally am on the verge of not being able to wear heels this high anymore because of the biomechanical structure of my foot 
(mild Hallux Limitus with a slightly elevated 1st metatarsal and the beginning of a dorsal 1st metatarsal-medial cuneiform exostosis - but I digress...)
BUT
If you know that you can comfortably wear high heels, this is a good choice for comfort and style and I will be watching with admiration from the wings (in my lower heeled shoes).
*sigh*



John Fluevog Prepares Merit 
$159 

Perhaps it's the Aquarius in me, 
but I totally dig this!
(Sorry, my seventies are showing...)
The heel takes a bit of getting used to but, once again, if you know that you can comfortably wear heels, this is another good choice for style and comfort. Because the heel height is lower than the Hi Wedge Dawn, this will be the better choice.
 

The Good, the Bad & the Fabulous...

What makes both of these shoes so comfortable is that they have a thick, rigid sole that allows no motion across the bottom of the foot, 
which significantly decreases mechanical strain of the joints, tendons and muscles and allows for more comfort. Both heels have a wide and relatively soft toebox that allows for more accomodation of mild to possibly moderate bunions and hammertoes. They also have excellent midfoot and rearfoot control and, in the case of the Hi Wedge Dawn, excellent ankle control.  
Anytime a shoe can 'lock in' the foot and ankle structures, you get more 'biomechanical control', which means: 

*More Comfort

*Less Chance of Injury

*Less Wear and Tear of the foot structures

*Slowing the progression of foot problems such as bunions and hammertoes

*Less strain on the knee, hip and lower back



Am I saying that these heels better than wearing a good walking shoe? 
No way.
But, if you are going to wear heels and you know can wear heels comfortably -
these are a good choice. 

When it comes to wearing heels, 
I always caution patients to listen to their bodies! If you are having any discomfort, then these are not the shoes for you. 
If any shoe causes you pain - don't wear them. Pain is your bodies way of warning you of a problem.
If your shoes hurt, you are straining something and doing damage!

Remember, it's your feet against a lifetime of all the concrete in the world so, no matter what shoe you choose, try to choose a shoe with a these four things:
*Thick, rigid sole for more protection
*Arch Support
*Wide, soft toebox
*Rearfoot Control 
  
Another thing to keep in mind is that 
choosing the right shoe depends on the biomechanics of your feet. 
That's what this blog is about. 
For example, a rocker-bottom shoe is great for most people with plantar fasciitis (heel pain) but I would never recommend a rocker-bottom shoe for anyone with Achilles Tendonitis as it can cause the condition to worsen.

With that in mind...


The Hi Wedge Dawn Should Be Comfortable For Patients with:
*Mild Plantar Fasciitis (Heel Pain) 
*Mild Hammertoes
*Mild Bunions
*Mild Achilles Tendonitis
*Maybe Mild Over-Pronators (Try wearing a dress orthotic specifically made for dress shoes to give you some arch support. Your health insurance might cover orthotics so ask your Podiatrist's office if they will check with your insurance to see if it is a covered benefit. If it is not a covered benefit, most Pod offices will carry an excellent OTC insert for dress shoes that are significantly less expensive). 

The Prepares Merit Should Be Comfortable For Patients with:
*Mild Plantar Fasciitis
*Mild to possibly Moderate Bunions 
*Mild to possibly Moderate Hammertoes
*Mild Achilles Tendonitis 
*Mild Metatarsalgia
*Mild Morton's Neuroma
*Mild Forefoot Capsulitis
*Possibly Mild Sesmoiditis 
*Mild Tendonitis
*Mild Tailor's Bunions 
*Mild Corns & Calluses 
*Mild to possibly Moderate Over-Pronators (try adding a custom-molded orthotic or over-the-counter insert made specifically for dress shoes or an less expensive over the counter dress insert for more arch control) 
*Mild to possibly Moderate Hypermobility (add an insert if needed)
*Someone who has had a previous Lisfranc's Injury but is healed and having no pain (If unsure, check with your Podiatrist)

 
These Shoes are NOT Recommended for Patients with:
*Moderate to Severe Hallux Limitus (decreased range of motion of the 1st toe joint)
*Hallux Rigidus (No motion across the 1st toe joint)
*Severe Bunions 
*Severe Hammertoes
*Degenerative Joint Disease
*Osteoarthritis
*Rheumatoid Arthritis 
*Severe Over-Pronators
*Severe Ankle Instability
*Severe Hypermobility  / Ligament Laxity
*Exostosis ("bumps" or "bone spurs" on the top of the midfoot area)
*Diabetics 
*Peripheral Neuropathy (Nerve Damage)
*Peripheral Arterial Disease (Poor Circulation)
*History of Ulcerations or Open Sores 
*Charcot Foot
*Weak Legs
*Moderate to Severe Knee, Hip & Lower Back Problems/Pain
*Balance Issues
*The Elderly


I hope this has been helpful and I thank you so much for reading!


Have a great weekend...

Dr. Cathleen A. McCarthy

:)