If you have a
, you know it is a painful
enlargement at the joint of the big toe. The
skin over the joint becomes swollen and is often
quite tender. Bunions can be inherited as a
family trait, can develop with no recognizable
cause or can be caused by shoes that fit poorly.
An important part of treatment is wearing shoes that conform to the shape of the
foot and do not cause pressure areas. This often alleviates the pain. In severe
cases, after many years, bunions can be disabling. Several types of surgery are
available that may relieve pain and improve the appearance of the foot. Surgery
is usually done to relieve pain.
is extremely common. It often begins
without injury and is felt under the heel,
usually while standing or walking.
Inflammation of the connective tissue on the
sole of the foot (plantar fascia) where it
attaches to the heel bone is the most common
cause of pain. It is often associated with a
bony protrusion (heel spur) seen on X-ray
studies.
Most cases will improve spontaneously.
Medication to reduce swelling of the soft
tissues in your foot and shoe inserts are quite
helpful. If pain continues, steroid injections
or walking casts are used. Only in the
most troubling and prolonged cases is surgery
recommended.
is caused by a nerve being
pinched. This pinching usually results in pain
between the third and fourth toes. Tight shoes
can squeeze foot bones together. The nerve
responds by forming a neuroma, a build up of
extra tissue in the nerve. The neuroma results
in pain, that may radiate into the toes.
Treatment usually involves wearing wider shoes
and taking oral medications to decrease the
swelling around the nerve. A pad on the sole of
the foot to spread the bones is often helpful.
Your doctor may also inject cortisone around the
nerve. If your difficulty continues, surgery to
remove the neuroma may be suggested.
are caused by pressure on the
skin of your foot. They may occur when bones of
the foot press against the shoe or when two foot
bones press together.
Common sites for corns and calluses are on the big toe and the fifth toe.
Calluses underneath the ends of the foot bones (metatarsals) are common. Soft
corns can occur between the toes.
Treatment involves relieving the pressure on the skin, usually by modifying the
shoe. Pads to relieve the bony pressure are helpful, but they must be positioned
carefully. On occasion, surgery is necessary to remove a bony prominence that
causes the corn or callus.
are one of several types of toe deformities. Hammertoes have a
permanent sideways bend in your middle toe joint. The resulting deformity
can be aggravated by tight shoes and usually results in pain over the prominent
bony areas on the top of the toe and at the end of the toe. A hard corn may
develop over this prominence.
occur on the sole of the foot and look like calluses. They
result from an infection by a specific virus. They are like warts elsewhere, but
they grow inward. The wart cannot grow outward because of weight placed on it
when you stand. You may experience severe pain when walking, and can have just
one or many plantar warts. Plantar warts are extremely difficult to treat, but
success has been achieved with repeated applications of salicylic acid
(available over the counter) to soften the overlying callus and expose the
virus. Other treatments include injection of the warts with medication, freezing
the warts with liquid nitrogen and, very rarely, surgery.