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Plantar Fasciitis

BACKGROUND

Plantar fasciitis is the most common cause of pain by the heel and sometimes along the entire bottom of your foot. It occurs when you have a tightness/irritation of the muscles and tissues that form the “suspension bridge” on the bottom of your foot.

This is also very common in fibromyalgia patients.

TREATMENT

Recommended Supplements

Calcium and Magnesium

Begin by taking 1,000-1,500 mg of calcium and 200 mg of magnesium at bedtime. Give it 6 weeks to start working.

Other Therapies & Advice

Wear a boot at night

Wearing a boot or brace at night that keeps your foot at a right angle while you sleep (easy to find online) helps.

Tape your foot

A podiatrist or chiropractor familiar with the technique can tape the bottom of your foot. This was a wonderful trick that an excellent Dallas chiropractor, Dr. Ron Huse, taught me. This tape then takes over the role of the suspension support and may ease the pain immediately.

Check for heel spurs

If the pain is from a small tender area over your heel, it may come from a tender thin bony “spur.”

Start with an adhesive “doughnut shaped” pad (the “doughnut hole” goes over the tender area).

Gently massaging the heel area while bathing can break up the heel spur over time.

Often pain diagnosed as heel spurs is actually coming from a tender muscle knot at the bottom of your calf muscle (which can be massaged to release).

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Some information on this site is from the book From Fatigued to Fantastic! Third Edition by Jacob Teitelbaum MD, copyright 2007 by Jacob Teitelbaum MD. Used by permission of Avery Publishing, an imprint of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.