I have this problem and someone recommend me to use custom made orthotics. But pain goes off a little only. The orthotics heel area is very high, do you think i need to continue to use? Thanks
lol Ive watched almost every youtube video on this problem and every one counterdics the next one...You say DO NOT strech it out ,and dont you braces and such...well I went too the ER and they said TOO stretch it out every day 3 times a day...as well as Ice and heat...my heel is very painfull to walk on ot touch....Im very confused because one doc or video tell me one thing and the next tells me the opposite!!!!!!!!!!!!! this is probally why I havnt been able to walk for 3 weeks!
Thank you. I've been running in minimalist shoes for eight months, but I think the Achilles pain began after mowing the lawn through heavy grass with the mower way out in front. Fortunately I can ocean swim about three times a week. This also happened during the holidays when my diet became haphazard. I'm 52 and female. I'm wondering if I should just stay off of it. My work keeps me active. Mainly I want to thank you. I look forward to trying these techniques out! :)
I have had "pump bumps" on both of my achilles. I have had them for several (5+) years. They are not painful, but it causes excess wear on the backs of my shoes. New "dress" shoes are painful until the bump starts to break down the back of the shoe !
I am 58, overweight and do not exercise a lot.
Do you think I would be a good candidate for surgery ? How long is the typical recovery ?
@theoldwizard998 Hard to say. You should focus on the weight issues first. If you're overweight you've got excess inflammation throughout your body, so losing weight and becoming healthier may relieve some of the pump bumps. And, per the info on the SockDoc site, "dress" shoes are not advised. Minimalist shoes are - VivoBarefoot are great women's dress shoes.
Hello Sock Doc! is it possible that i got this type of pain from just being sick? i've had the flu + cold/cough/strep throat and have been just resting at home for 9 days now and i got heel pain (retrocalcaneal bursitis/achilles tendonitis) sometime midawy iand im just wondering how i got it when i havent been doing any straneous activities at all.
@BMD Definitely. Due to the association between your calf muscles and your adrenal (hormonal) glands. The flu puts a tremendous amount of stress on your adrenals and that will cause lower leg muscle imbalances and could result in AT.
@charlambe In the case of tendonitis or tendinosis yes, definitely. Surgery should always be your last resort unless there is actually a tear in the tendon away from the bone.
I have this problem and someone recommend me to use custom made orthotics. But pain goes off a little only. The orthotics heel area is very high, do you think i need to continue to use? Thanks
danzky2426 8 hours ago
@danzky2426 Check out the post
sock-doc.com/2011/09/unnecessary-orthotics/
TheSockDoc 2 hours ago
No need to wait if the pain is gone. Ease back into it.
TheSockDoc 1 week ago
One the pain abates, how long should you wait before starting to train again? (I've stopped all training since the retrocalcaneal bursitis kicked in)
Great video, thanks!
mariozig 1 week ago
lol Ive watched almost every youtube video on this problem and every one counterdics the next one...You say DO NOT strech it out ,and dont you braces and such...well I went too the ER and they said TOO stretch it out every day 3 times a day...as well as Ice and heat...my heel is very painfull to walk on ot touch....Im very confused because one doc or video tell me one thing and the next tells me the opposite!!!!!!!!!!!!! this is probally why I havnt been able to walk for 3 weeks!
longjohnw86 4 weeks ago
Thank you. I've been running in minimalist shoes for eight months, but I think the Achilles pain began after mowing the lawn through heavy grass with the mower way out in front. Fortunately I can ocean swim about three times a week. This also happened during the holidays when my diet became haphazard. I'm 52 and female. I'm wondering if I should just stay off of it. My work keeps me active. Mainly I want to thank you. I look forward to trying these techniques out! :)
hulianana 1 month ago
I have had "pump bumps" on both of my achilles. I have had them for several (5+) years. They are not painful, but it causes excess wear on the backs of my shoes. New "dress" shoes are painful until the bump starts to break down the back of the shoe !
I am 58, overweight and do not exercise a lot.
Do you think I would be a good candidate for surgery ? How long is the typical recovery ?
theoldwizard998 2 months ago
@theoldwizard998 Hard to say. You should focus on the weight issues first. If you're overweight you've got excess inflammation throughout your body, so losing weight and becoming healthier may relieve some of the pump bumps. And, per the info on the SockDoc site, "dress" shoes are not advised. Minimalist shoes are - VivoBarefoot are great women's dress shoes.
TheSockDoc 2 months ago
Hello Sock Doc! is it possible that i got this type of pain from just being sick? i've had the flu + cold/cough/strep throat and have been just resting at home for 9 days now and i got heel pain (retrocalcaneal bursitis/achilles tendonitis) sometime midawy iand im just wondering how i got it when i havent been doing any straneous activities at all.
BMD 2 months ago
@BMD Definitely. Due to the association between your calf muscles and your adrenal (hormonal) glands. The flu puts a tremendous amount of stress on your adrenals and that will cause lower leg muscle imbalances and could result in AT.
TheSockDoc 2 months ago
I think a lot of tendonitis may really be achilles bursitis.
openuniverse2003 3 months ago
Can the heal be fixed without surgery
charlambe 4 months ago
@charlambe In the case of tendonitis or tendinosis yes, definitely. Surgery should always be your last resort unless there is actually a tear in the tendon away from the bone.
TheSockDoc 4 months ago
Thank you!
DylanNTheBoizAndBob 6 months ago