Thursday, April 3, 2008

Keep Your Feet Happy

As I learned as a small child, properly fitting shoes are a must.

Having lived through the 60s, I am a devotee of bare feet (even my mother could never get me to keep my shoes on), Earth shoes, flats or low heeled shoes, and what my youngest daughter calls "granola shoes" (Romika or Birkenstock).

I like reflexology and have been using this technique since the 1970s.

Another natural approach is a great herbal foot soak followed by a good massage with our foot soak tea. followed by massage with our special peppermint foot cream...

It probably would be more fun if you could get Ole Moose to do the massage :~)

I've seen this doctor on TV and for once I think they found someone who is really pretty sensible. I'd agree it is important to care for your feet. And his pointers on how to get a good fit with shoes are worth reading.

By Nicholas DiNubile, M.D.
It's pretty amazing that we all don't suffer with achy feet. Leonardo Da Vinci, artist and engineer, said that "the human foot is a masterpiece of engineering and a work of art."

According to The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, each foot has approximately 100 working parts including 26 bones and 33 joints. Twenty-five percent of all the bones in your skeleton reside in your feet, and they work hard.

One mile of walking places over 60 tons of stress on each foot. The average person walks approximately 1,000 miles per year. Serious runners often log 30 miles per week pounding their feet with forces three to five times body weight, absorbing 110 tons per foot, for each mile they run.

It's no wonder that 20 percent of all musculoskeletal related office visits involve the foot and ankle area. Foot problems cost the U.S. approximately $3.5 billion a year. Perhaps Leonardo should have also warned us that artistic and durable do not often go together.

Interestingly, it's not just the pounding that gets your feet into trouble - it's often the shoes. Hard to believe but a significant number of individuals are wearing the wrong size shoes or sneaks.

This is in part because most of us do not realize that your shoe size actually changes as an adult. Even though the bones in your feet stop growing in your teens, your feet still expand with age. Your arch drops, leading to a lengthening of your foot and the ligaments weaken resulting in widening or "splaying" especially in the forefoot area.

The overall result is a longer, wider foot and the need for shoes or sneakers one or two sizes bigger and with a wider toe box area. Women are particularly susceptible, and I'm not just talking about Sex and the City's Carrie and her infamous Manolo's.

Most of their lives, they have jammed their poor feet into tight narrow high heeled shoes, almost the modern versions of foot "binding" popularized in China where women's feet were tightly wrapped to keep their feet small and aesthetically pleasing.

It's no wonder that over 70 percent of women complain of foot pain. One study found that women stopped on the street were much more likely to be in a shoe too tight than their correct size.

This leads to many painful foot conditions like bunions, corns, calluses, neuromas (pinched nerve) and more. I recall a sweet older patient who came into my office and when asked how I could help her, she took off her shoes, pointed to her feet and said "these dogs are barkin'." Of course her shoes were two sizes too small.

Fashion is part of the problem, especially with kids who will often sacrifice proper fit to get a pair that is cool. Also, with the rapid growth spurts, even a shoe that fits well one month may not the next. Parents need to check often. Also, for both kids and especially adult shoewear, cost does not always equate with comfort.

Marketing drives much of what kids and adults want in terms of shoewear. Nike wants you to be like Mike. Allen Iverson's Reebok was also the number one sneaker in the world when he was in my home town of Philadelphia.

And in a 1993 basketball sneaker commercial, Charles Barkley was perhaps the most honest when he said "These are my new shoes. They're good shoes. They won't make you rich like me, they definitely won't make you handsome like me. They'll only make you have shoes like me. That's it."

The influence starts quite early. When my daughter was little, her Barbie Doll had such high fashion (i.e. high heeled, too tight) shoes that I hoped for her sake that Ken was studying to be a podiatrist.

So how do you keep your feet happy and healthy? Learn to listen to them. If they are "barkin," first be sure you are in the right footwear. Also, follow these tips:

Get both feet measured every time you buy shoes.

Shop at the end of the day when your feet tend to be their largest (swelling etc).

Be sure there's plenty of room in the toe box area. Toes should wiggle freely not feel pressured or cramped. There should also be a thumb's width space between the tip of the toes (especially the longest one) and the end of the shoe.

Ladies, try tracing your foot on a piece of paper. Next, place one of your "high fashion" shoes over the tracing. It should be pretty clear why your feet hurt.

Never think that you can "break-in" a shoe. The shoe always wins that battle.

A good shoemaker can help with minor pressure or hot spots, or a heel area that's too loose. Remember, I said minor, not major adjustments.

For more tips, check http://www.orthoinfo.org/ and click on the foot icon on the skeleton.

If symptoms persist, see an orthopaedic surgeon or podiatrist who can help you better understand and resolve your foot problem and also assure that there is not other medical issues going on since systemic conditions (like diabetes and rheumatoid arthritis) can begin with foot related issues. Also, foot pain can be referred from other areas like a pinched nerve in your lower back. Get things checked.

Over the years many have philosophized about the foot. I suspect that it started with their own achy feet. A classic orthopaedic surgery textbook about the foot (by Melvin Jahss) notes that "the foot is often neglected unless it is your own; it then becomes the pedestal on which the rest of you stands."

My mother even had a view: "You can't cheat your feet." Abraham Lincoln suggested that "a man only needs to be so tall that his feet reach the ground." Along that line, Oprah Winfrey remarked, "I still have my feet on the ground, I just wear better shoes." Hopefully they're the right size.

Be kind to your feet - use them, but don't abuse them. It's hard to keep a smile when your feet are frowning.

2007 DrNick.com . All Rights Reserved.

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