One of the most common injuries in runners, joggers and tennis players is plantar fasciitis, pain on the bottom of the heel.
A band of tissue called the plantar fascia extends from your five toes, along the bottom of your foot to attach on the bottom of your heel. When you run, you land on your heel and raise yourself on your toes as you shift your weight to your other foot, causing all your weight to be held up by your plantar fascia. This repetitive force can tear the fascia from its attachment on your heel.
Several factors increase force on the fascia, such as shoes that have stiff soles that do not bend in the right place just behind the ball of your big toe, shoes that are too wide for your feet, running too fast for the present strength of your plantar fascia, or not allowing enough time to recover between fast workouts. It can also be the first site of pain for arthritis. Doctors have no medications that help heal the plantar fascia. Cortisone injections and aspirin-like pills can reduce pain, but they can also delay healing.
If you have plantar fasciitis, stop running and limit walking until you can run without feeling pain. Since you pedal with your knees and hips and place little force on your fascia, you can usually pedal a bicycle without feeling pain. Use shoes that have flexible soles. Wear arch supports that limit the rolling in motion of your feet, stretch your calf muscles and wear night splints. Surgery to cut the plantar, called fasciotomy, is usually ineffective and may even prevent healing. I have treated some patients with infractible pain, unconventionally, with 10 mg/day alindronate for three months.
Some podiatrists now offer a non-surgical treatment for plantar fascitis that does not respond to the conventional treatments. The Food and Drug Administration has approved The Dornier EPOS extracorporeal shockwave machine that has been shown to cure persistent plantar fasciitis. If your heel pain has not been cured by other treatments, check with a podiatrist to see whether extracorporeal shockwave treatment is appropriate for you.
Dr. Gabe Mirkin has been a radio talk show host for 25 years and practicing physician for more than 40 years; he is board certified in four specialties, including sports medicine. Read or listen to hundreds of his fitness and health reports at http://www.DrMirkin.com
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For other common injuries see my articles on * Elbow Pain: Tennis Elbow * A Pain in the Butt: Piriformis Syndrome * Ankle Pain: Achilles Tendinitis * Shin Splints * Shoulder Pain: Rotator Cuff Injuries * Stress Fractures
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