Plantar fasciitis is one of the most common conditions that affects runners.
In fact, foot pain consistent with plantar fasciitis accounts for about 40% of all visits to the podiatrists in the United States each year.
Unfortunately, just because you think that you have plantar fasciitis, and you started doing some simple things to treat it, it doesn't necessarily mean that it's going to get better.
If you are a runner, and you think you have plantar fasciitis, you must realize there are some avoidable mistakes you could make when trying to self-treat runner's heel pain.
Today on the Doc On The Run Podcast, we're talking about the top five reasons runners heel pain doesn't get better.
Partial credit vs pass or fail with running injuries
Add stress systematically after running injury (DAY 3)
Is it a big deal if I run with a partially torn plantar fascia?
Every run is test run after healing an injury (DAY 2)
How can gout lead to hallux rigidus?
Find the gaps between you and running (DAY 1)
When does a pregnant runner need orthotics?
How to use Yasso 800s to test marathon readiness after injury
Can my doctor tell if I need peroneal tendon surgery by looking at my ankle?
How big toe position can help sesamoid stress fracture or bipartite sprain
Injured 5 weeks out from half marathon. Is there hope?
What does a fracture walking boot do?
Difference between a sesamoid fracture non-union and bi-partite sesamoid sprain
The #1 question for a runner with a second stress fracture
When should I give in and have plantar plate surgery?
Reduce your risk of the #1 most common injury by 35%?
What do injured runners do that makes as much a sense as picking at a healing skin incision?
How much earlier than X-ray can ultrasound prove fracture healing?
What info would I give to a high school cross-country team?
What is a common cause of 5th metatarsal fracture in a trail runner?
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