She didn't seem confident that this would ever go away, but she said it would get better with the stretching exercises and icing it down after exercise.
My physiotherapist told me to keep a frozen water bottle in the freezer - take it out when completely frozen put it in a sock and then roll your foot on that - takes care of inflammation. Really, really do the stretches you were given. I was also told to wear shoes all the time - not barefoot in the house. Although once mine went away I'm back to going barefoot whenever possible.
Sorry to hear about the PF! Its no fun. I was training for a half marathon in september and got it from switching to minimalist shoes. Big mistake for my foot type... anyways... I kept off it for several weeks and went to a good massage therapist. as far as exercise, I did the rolling a frozen water bottle trick. Seemed to help a bit. Also try freezing a dixie cup with water. Peel the paper back and use it as a ice massage on the area that hurts! Really helped me! Give it plenty of rest so you don't do any more damage!!
It will definately get better. I have heal spurs that you can see on the x-rays because I didn't get my pf treated until I was waking up in the middle of the night with horrible foot cramps and in the morning I could hardly stand on them until I had warmed up. And every step was like I had a stone in the heal of my shoe by the end of the day.
Keep the frozen bottles of water ready to roll under your feet after you finish exercising, do all the stretches your PT tells you to do at first. Do you have the leg/foot cramps? If so they make a weird foot brace thing for sleeping that keeps your foot stretched at night
It does take awhile for the pain to go away, but slowly it doesn't hurt as much. I lost some weight and got the custom orthotics for my shoes from the podiatrist. Try swimming and bike riding until the pain goes away.
I actually purchased a used eliptical/bike today just to use it. I tried the eliptical and it hurt -way- too much, so I switched to the bike.
Sarah- No, I don't have leg or foot cramps, this came on all of a sudden and at first I thought I had stepped on something. And my regular GP diagnosed me and told me to do the stretches and if it didn't improve in a couple weeks, she would refer me to a specialist.
Staying off of it today and rolling a frozen can of peaches (poor peaches) under my foot as I did dishes really helped. So did ibuprofen and stretching my toes and feet in the tub with hot water.
Ouch!!! I would recommend taking some time (maybe a couple of weeks) off of exercise completely. Also, the others had great advice for icing, shoe inserts, etc. I had to invest in some pricey shoes (both for work and for my workout shoes). Try to not walk barefoot at all (even around the house). I'm sorry you're experiencing this! Mine has gone away completely now, but it was terrible while it lasted. I believe that you can receive a cortisone shot, if necessary.
Ouch!!! I would recommend taking some time (maybe a couple of weeks) off of exercise completely. Also, the others had great advice for icing, shoe inserts, etc. I had to invest in some pricey shoes (both for work and for my workout shoes). Try to not walk barefoot at all (even around the house). I'm sorry you're experiencing this! Mine has gone away completely now, but it was terrible while it lasted. I believe that you can receive a cortisone shot, if necessary.
Ibuprofen and ice have been taking care of the pain And using a bike is ok, along with my bowflex.
I've been doing some hardcore stretches with my foot and today doesn't hurt -as- badly. But I'm definately not jogging for at least a month.
A trick I learned is to take a rolled up towel and stretch your arches out with it before you get out of bed - helps with that "first step" pain. Just gently pull on both ends of the towel (or as firm as is comfortable).
At my worst, I was using custom orthotics, towel stretches, frozen water bottles, taping up my arches, prescription NSAIDs and steroid shots. (I was also at my highest weight and standing 12 & 1/2 hours a day). Now as long as I wear good-for-me shoes (Birkenstocks, Danskos, Clarks, Brooks Adrenaline GTS, Orthaheel) ALL THE TIME, I'm fine. I have super flat feet, so being barefoot is terrible for my feet.
Good luck - it can take quite a while for the inflammation to die down. If you have a lot of AM pain, look in to a night splint. Most are big bulky things, but there is a sock-like one out there that's pretty easy to tolerate.
I did all my walking with inserts in my shoes and I would walk until my foot started to hurt (it would come and go depending on my day). Then I'd head home so at least I'd get some walking in. Swimming is excellent cardio that shouldn't hurt your feet too much. You can still work out your upper body, right? Push ups, pull ups, rowing, punching a punching bag, bicep/tricep curls, etc. Honestly the best the thing for me was losing weight and wearing insoles. These injuries take a few months to heal so just give it time. If you follow all your doctor's advice, it will get better. Good luck!
Thanks everyone! I've been doing a lot better with stretches and I broke down and bought -really- nice Brooks Adrenaline GTS 12 shoes, which helped almost instantly. Since I've lost a few more lbs, that might have helped a tiny bit as well.
I've been through the plantar fasciitis before, that pain was horrible. It eventually developed into Posterior Tibial Tendon Dysfunction which was truly caused by a hereditary abnormality in my foot (non-fused accessory navicular). I'm not trying to scare you but please make sure that your doctor tells you the answer to all of the questions that you have. You NEED physical therapy, you likely need custom orthotics and supportive shoes/possible orthopedic shoes. Rest like you are supposed to, and if they have you in a walking boot wear it! I wish I would have had a doctor who treated my problems more aggressively because now I have a condition that will only get worse and it brings me a great deal of pain. Some people don't have underlying issues and with treatment it resolves but just be sure that you are vigilant about your doctor treating your condition appropriately. Swimming is the best exercise when suffering from this as well as bike riding (just don't overdo it).
You may have to take a break from the walking/jogging until it heals. I was diagnosed with it when I was working a job where I was on my feet 90& of the work day, and NOTHING helped until I got a desk job.
I also had to give up ALL my cute shoes, because none of them had the kind of arch support I needed. I still have to be careful, but at least I have a little more flexibility now, and can wear some cute flats, but for many years, I could only wear Birkenstocks, Halflinger, and New Balance (before New Balance had a cheapy-line. Now I have to make sure it's the higher end NBs).
For several years the only exercise I could do that wouldn't aggravate the plantar's fasciitis was water exercise and other non-impact exercise. Of course the weight was a big part of the equation, but I had a very-thin, athletic coworker with even worse plantar's fasciitis and foot pain than I had. She spent hundreds of dollars on shoe orthotics, and also said that during flares she had to stay off her feet as much as she could until it healed, or it wouldn't. So definitely talk to your doctor about what you should and shouldn't be doing while the inflammation and pain is severe.