Plantar fasciitis
cmunne
Posts: 1 Member
help! Can you go ahead and workout with this condition? It is so sore and I have done ice, aleve, rest..... And insoles! Anyone else have this? And how did you solve it?
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Replies
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Exercises like stretching your heel every morning and night.0
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Sometimes you can take a golf ball and sit it in the floor and while sitting in a chair rub your foot over top of the golf ball will help to alleviate some of the pain. Some people will put the golf ball in the freezer for awhile to get it cold before they use it to help with the pain.
Definitely need to do stretches that help to stretch out the area too. Mine bothers me sometimes and I have to scale back the type or intensity of the workout that I am doing to keep the pain from getting worse. Rowing, elliptical, and cycling usually do not aggravate the problem for me. It may be a trial and error process to find what activities make it worse, or don't cause you any problems.
Good luck!0 -
This can be quite tricky to get rid of. You can exercise, but you can also make it worse and slow the recovery. I had it bad a few years back and had to get shots and orthodics from a podiatrist. You can Google the stretches they do help. The best one for me is standing on a board for a period of time at about 45 degrees. I suggest to be very cautious and not let it get too bad.0
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stand on a tennis ball or lacrosse ball0
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I had to use these brace/splint like things that are available at the drugstore without a prescription. They are with ace bandages and stuff like wrist braces.. I wore them at night to keep the foot stretched. My doctor also recommended freezing a water bottle and rolling my foot on it when the pain got really bad. She also suggested aleve, but it didn't work well for me and I went back to ibuprofen.
Mine was so bad, I actually first went to the doctor for x-rays because I thought I had a broken foot. It rarely bothers me now. I kept the braces and don't need them often because I immediately start treating if I get any pain at all.
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I had this about ten years ago. A doctor told me stretching would correct it in most cases. I started diligently doing two or three stretches every morning and evening and it very quickly...within a week or so...started feeling better and in a few weeks was gone completely.0
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I ditched the orthotics and did stretches. Stand on a step facing upstairs. Move to the edge so that you are holding on with yout toes and as little of the ball of the foot as possible. SLOWLY drop your heels as far as you can and hold the stretch. Then SLOWLY rise up until you are on your tippy toes and hold the stretch. I did this 10 times, twice a day and my PF disappeared after about two weeks, never to return.
Also, wear various heel heights on your shoes and go barefoot or in flats as much as you can. You don't want the calf muscles and heel/back of the ankle ligaments to shorten again.0 -
You'll need to stretch your calves - heel drops on a step and holding your stretch longer each time. My Sports Med Dr said to work up to a 5 min stretch as often as I could several times daily. I also used a tennis ball on them before getting out of bed. It took a very long time to heal and I can still feel it when I run yrs later. Good luck. ☺️0
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I've had it for 7 years now. Stretches, shots, orthotic inserts, 10 different types of shoes and nothing has worked. It comes and goes but I have never been able to get rid of it. Some friends (runners and nurses) have had success with only one of those mentioned above. Flares do seem to happen when I am barefoot or in flip flops. Good luck to UA, PF just sux.0
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I had this. I went to a podiatrist and he made me the cheapest looking things to wear on my feet. They worked though. It is basically like those strutz from as seen on TV stuff. Wear them whenever your feet touch the ground. It sounds crazy but it works.0
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I bought a foot brace at Walgreens. Wore it every night for a month overnight and the pain went away completely. Give it a try.0
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Interesting...as my right foot began to hurt tonigjt for the first time in years. I conquered it before using night time foot braces...got it on amazon for $30. It did work. That and wearing the rubber crocs clogs. Those were the only shoes I could wear and not have pain.
Good luck..I highly recommend the night brace. I also wore it before bed or in the mornings / afternoons when I would be off my feet a while (watching TV or reading)0 -
Oh and I did not have any luck with the orthotic inserts. The only thing that worked for me was the braces. I had two, since both my feet were flaring up at the same time.0
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Walk barefoot every possible opportunity. I had it, it is now gone. Physical therapy didn't work for me, walking barefoot did.
My theory is that we spend so much time in shoes that we damage the flexibility of our feet. Our feet are meant to flex and conform to the surface underneath. By wearing shoes we are strapping a stiff board under our foot restricting movement.
That continued restriction causes our feet to lose flexibility and then are injured on the occasion that we do stretch/overstretch the fascia.
If you aren't free spirited enough to go barefoot there are shoes that are minimally restrictive. Do NOT wear any shoe/sandal that has a heel that is thicker/higher than the sole.
Plantar fasciitis is a self inflicted condition.0 -
I have this problem off and on. My podiatrist also recommended the tennis ball rolling, it helps somewhat when I have a flare up. I have never gotten shots, but I do have a prescription for Naproxen that works wonders. I only use it when it gets bad.0
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I was having a lot of issues with this, some days I could barely walk. I tried icing it and stretches and using a golf ball to massage it and it helped a bit, but the thing that worked best for me was getting a massage. I went to a massage therapist and told her I had plantar fasciitis pain and she did an intense (deep tissue) massage of my hips, thighs, calves and feet and even did the cup things on my feet and it was instant relief. been over a month with no pain. I'm totally going to do it more regularly until my muscles aren't so tight lol (My muscles in my legs were so tight it was pulling everything out of whack)0
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See a sports physio, don't just treat the condition with ice etc. find and treat the cause, most likely top of foot and further up the leg / side of calf.0
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Interesting. Working out in minimalist shoes and barefoot is exactly how I developed the first twinges of PF. Returning to running shoes with a heel drop solved it instantly.
The thing about PF is, the worse you let it get, the longer it takes to heal and the more you might need to throw at it.
I roll a spiky ball under my foot, stretch my calves, and do strength work to prevent a reappearance.0 -
Check out www.runnersworld.com they have a great deal if information, treatments, and advise about how to train with it.0
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I was diagnosed with PF two weeks ago and it has completely gone away with the daily recommended stretching exercises for PF, ibuprofen and wearing the night splint to bed. I've actually had this problem for years but just recently went to the doctor for it -- should've went sooner because PF caused a lot of discomfort through those years!0
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I had to go to the foot dr for back in 1994 and did the custom made orthotics, cortisone shots in the heel, physical therapy and ended up having surgery on it. At that time I was very obese and worked retail mgmt and was on my feet for 10 to 12 hours a day on concrete. It got so bad before surgery I couldn't even walk from my driveway to my house after work and that was it. I had to do something. The surgery helped but the one thing they didn't tell me is when they go in and cut that band it also could make your foot not be supported as well. I had problems a few years later when I did dog agility and was on my feet for 12 plus hours a day at agility trials. Foot dr, (different one that did my surgery) would tape the foot up, do cortisone shots, more custom foot orthotics. The foot orthotics work the best and really need to be the ones the dr cast and custom makes for you. They are pricey but some health insurances pay for them. My last set I had done in 2013 I still had health insurance that paid for them so I only paid about $60 of the $400 cost of the 2 full foot ones. My insurance was changing at work and the new co didn't pay for them so I wanted to get a pair made. I lost alot of weight in 2012-2013 also so I needed a new pair for the new size of my foot. I don't wear them much now and haven't had issues with my feet or PT since loosing so much weight.
Good luck it is a very painful issue and I never wanted go through that pain again. It was horrible!0 -
cheshirecatastrophe wrote: »Interesting. Working out in minimalist shoes and barefoot is exactly how I developed the first twinges of PF. Returning to running shoes with a heel drop solved it instantly.
The thing about PF is, the worse you let it get, the longer it takes to heal and the more you might need to throw at it.
I roll a spiky ball under my foot, stretch my calves, and do strength work to prevent a reappearance.
Exactly for me too. I got the cortisone shots, proper shoes with inserts, rest when needed, I froze a water bottle and would roll my foot over it on its side for a nice stretch and ice massage, I did where you pick the towel up with your foot, also holding the heel and gently pressing the toes towards you. I also had a brace to wear during the day and a splint at night. When I wear proper shoes I am fine. If I try to go barefoot I feel a twinge of it wanting to come back so I don't do it very often. Good luck.0 -
In my experience, going barefoot only made it worse. For me the best shoes (and I tried many) to do normal walking around in was the soft rubber Croc clogs (not the hard soled dressy ones, but those standard, "ugly" clogs, like garden clogs. I wore either the name brand Crocs ones, or the ones I could get at Payless. They were the only ones that soothed and supported my feet making it easier for me to walk.) I also can wear some of the other Crocs styles but they have to be the rubber shoe when I have a flare up.
Wearing the braces at night and off and on during the day when I'm sitting certainly helped. The braces were more expensive at my local pharmacy ($70!!!!) vs. Amazon.com ($30). I got 2 for less than the price of one at my local pharmacy.
The braces are a bit inconvenient and weird to sleep with, but the return on investment is soooo worth it. Really really helped a LOT.0 -
Consider this, other than diabetic or other causes of circulatory issues, podiatrists would be out of business if we didn't wear shoes.
Podiatry is very dependent on the shoe industry. As for orthotics, they are treating the symptom, the underlying cause is lack of flexibility caused by wearing shoes almost since birth.
Orthotics will give pain relief because they restrict movement. Restricting movement is not the cure, flexibility is the cure.0 -
I consider the fact that may pain gets worse and more excruciating when I walk barefoot. And I used to be barefoot at every possible opportunity before I got PF. As soon as I was in the door of my house, the shoes and socks came off. I would be barefoot all the time if I could.
I'm not saying going barefoot caused my PF...I am saying that it certainly didn't help to go barefoot and in fact made it worse. In my experience.0 -
I've had this for a few years now and just quietly put up with the pain, until about 3 months ago when I invested in a night brace off Amazon. It works great; its not the easiest thing to get used to (it took me about a week) but I'm pretty much pain free now - especially when I get up first thing in the morning! Bliss
I was advised to go barefoot as little as possible, even slippers with a really soft sole had to go as they were just causing me pain.
I would definitely recommend the brace though0 -
I highly recommend active release. It's incredibly painful, but it works. I don't need a brace, orthotics, or anything else now that I've had treatment from my doctor.
If treatment isn't available, I recommend investing in a foam roller. Stretch your calves as this is where the pain comes from. Also a golf ball rolled under your foot will help as well. Seriously seriously seriously get active release done.
http://kinetichealth.ca/services/active-release/0 -
I've had this on and off for years. I've recently had to cut back on running and switch up my cardio workout because the pain was terrible. When it flares up, I basically ease up on my activity/workouts and wait for the pain to subside. Sometimes this takes months, depending on how bad it is. However, it's hard to "rest" because I love to work out and I do quite a bit of walking at my job.
I also roll a spiky ball under my foot - it feels great after a workout. Stretching helps A LOT. I've added inserts to some of my shoes or try to wear shoes that have some support. No flats. Even walking around the house, I always wear shoes because it hurts to go barefoot.
- I feel your pain tho..... sorry!
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My shoes were the culprit.0
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