Got Plantar Fasciitis?
Fleet Feet Orlando has the answer
The Strassburg Sock is the number one solution for effective treatment for this extremely debilitating condition.
What is Plantar Fasciitis and how would
the Strassburg Sock help me?
Written by Dr. David Strassburg,
inventor of the Strassburg Sock
Let's
say you are a new runner/walker. Or perhaps, a long-time
recreational runner. You hop in your car and pick out a pair of flashy
new sneakers from mega-sports store. The price is right and they are your
favorite color so you put a couple more dollars on the VISA card and off you
go. Your first couple days on the roads are great and your dirty clothes hamper
is rapidly filling up with the fruits of your labor. You're feeling pretty good
about the miles you are putting in your training log.
Pretty
good until you get up one morning and notice something doesn't feel quite
right. It's your heel and it’s a little tender, almost a bruise-like feeling.
Similar to that one you felt when you were at the beach last summer, running
across the parking lot and you firmly planted the heel of your bare foot on
that unexpected stone. Your first few steps out of bed are a little cautious,
but as you make your way towards the coffee pot and your foot gets moving, the
dull ache slowly goes away. "Hmm…. Must be getting old you tell yourself. Just a little stiffness. Nothing a little
stretching won't fix". The pain is gone, your shoes are on and now
it's time to get in a few miles. The previous days heel issue is all but forgotten. The next morning you get up and the pain is
there again.
It's a
bit more painful than the day before but once again disappears after you get up
and move around. This cycle repeats itself until one day you find yourself
having to tiptoe to the bathroom in the morning to brush your teeth. "What
in the heck is going on?" you ask yourself as you try to figure out why
this heel pain goes away during the day only to return with a vengeance every
morning. Welcome to the world of the most common running injury, Plantar
Fasciitis!
You may
feel alone but as you start asking around among your runner friends, you'll
find that this problem is all too common. And it's not just found among
runners. Dr. Scholl (yes, the guy whose name you see in all the drugstores)
referred to the condition in a book he wrote in 1915 as "Policeman's
Heel". Plantar Fasciitis was the injury that ended the career of Joltin' Joe DiMaggio of the New York Yankees. It's also
been the bane of superstar 1st baseman Albert Pujols of the St. Louis Cardinals, arguably one of the best players in the game today.
So you're not a sports superstar or even a runner and you think you're off the
hook. Think again. Plantar Fasciitis is an equal opportunity afflicter
affecting everyday people as well. By some estimates 10% of the population has
had it and there are an estimated 7 million new cases each year. It’s the
number one reason someone goes to the foot doctor, accounting for an estimated
46% of all office visits. Why? Well now it's time to get into the technical
stuff.
A
little anatomy is in order here. The foot is a pretty complex and amazing
machine containing 26 bones, 33 joints, 107 ligaments, and 19 muscles and
tendons. There's a lot going on here and what goes on here ultimately affects
everything going on up above it. So how does this anatomic symphony get out of
whack and why does your heel hurt? It all comes down to something that's
happening with a thick fibrous tissue on the bottom of your foot called the
Plantar Fascia. Sound familiar? The Plantar Fascia is attached on end to the
heel and on the other end between the ball of the foot and the toes. If you
think of it like a three sided equilateral triangle with the point straight up,
the plantar fascia would be the bottom leg. For a whole host of reasons I'll
discuss in a bit, this Plantar Fascia car tear away from the bone it's attached
to. The term -itis in medical terminology means
"inflamed" so Plantar Fasciitis means "Inflamed Plantar
Fascia". Inflammation is part of it but what is really going on could
better be described as a small tear or micro-tear at one end of the Plantar
Fascia, usually the end attached to the heel.
What
causes Plantar Fasciitis and what can be done about it?
What
causes Plantar Fasciitis?
In most
people, it's a perfect storm of a variety of factors that starts the ball
rolling. In the example above where the person gets out of bed and has their
initial pain relieved by gentle stretching, effective injury-halting treatment
is often delayed. Some of the more common causes are listed below:
Incorrect Footwear - This
includes summertime favorites such as dollar-store flip-flops or going
barefoot. Not they will always cause the injury but they certainly will
accelerate it. Shoes that flex in the arch as opposed to closer to the toes
will put extra stress on this Plantar Fascia. You local Running Specialty
Retailer can help you select the right shoes for you.
Over-pronation- Pronation is a good thing but too much of a good
thing is rarely good. Pronation is the twisting or
rolling your foot undergoes from the time your foot touches the ground until
the time it leaves the ground. Generally, in ideal cases, it's about 15
degrees. Its function is the absorb shock and position the foot to allow you to
push off of your toes. Think of it like twisting a hand towel to wring it out.
As you twist it more, it becomes tighter. Sometimes it can become too tight and
can cause the fascia to tear away from the heel. This over-pronation can be modified through use of an appropriate running shoe selection or an
insert, such as a Superfeet.
Sudden Increases in Activity - Like
the new runner mentioned above too much too soon is also never good. Find a
training group at a local running store to guide through the process of
increasing your activity at a rate your body can handle.
Sudden Weight Gain - A
little too much turkey after the turkey trot followed by Christmas cookies and
a winter wonderland of slippery streets not always conducive to running can
help add a few pounds. Pregnancy also often comes with some rapid weight gain
as well a hormone called Relaxin which can make
joints more unstable.
What
can be done about it?
There
are many things that can be done to help assist in recovery from plantar
fasciitis. These include shoe changes, training changes, icing, stretching,
orthotics, and cortisone injections. All these things helpful during the
daytime, but for plantar fasciitis to be treated effectively it needs to be
addressed as a 24-hour solution. All day long the plantar fascia is being
stretched and pulled through the course of normal movement and bearing the
weight of the whole body up above it. When you are off your feet at night the
plantar fasica is relaxed, bearing no weight or load
and begins to heal in this position. It's being
stretched all day and then attempts to heal in an unstretched position at night. Unfortunately, it doesn't have an adequate opportunity for
these micro-tears to heal with just a few hours off your feet. When the
sufferer steps down on their foot in the morning, the healing that takes place
is rapidly undone and that tearing is manifested as morning heel pain.
If we could just find a way to maintain tension on the plantar
fascia at night wouldn't it heal much faster?
Have
you have ever had a cut on your knuckle and noticed how long it took for it to
heal. Every time you bend your finger the skin is stretched and the ends of the
cut are pulled open. Now imagine you made a fist, bent your knuckle, and let it
heal stretched it in that position. It's going to heal much faster but you’re
not constantly going back and forth between stretched and unstretched.
Night Splints
Doctors
have recognized that something needed to be done about night- time positioning
of the foot since the early 90s. The first doctors to do this were 2
podiatrists from Temple University, Dr.’s Wapner and
Sharkey, who fashioned some splints for their patients to wear at night. The
contraptions basically resembled the back half of a ski boot, designed the bend
the ankle and bring the foot back to slightly less than 90 degrees. They were
followed by many others office fabricated and commercial designs with varying
degrees of success. The problem had always been that these night splints were
hot, bulky, and cumbersome. Patients don't like to wear them. Doctors know that
and therefore don't like to prescribe them. This is where the idea for the Strassburg Sock was born.
The Strassburg Sock Solution
The Strassburg Sock was created out of necessity by my father,
Terry Strassburg, in a desire to find an effective
solution for his own case of plantar fasciitis. Dad was a runner who couldn't
run, not a place any runner wants to be. He had gone through the cycle of
initial relief through stretching. Then, visits to the doctors for medications,
a cortisone shot (which this twice wounded Vietnam veteran described as one of
his most painful experiences ever),
and the
big plastic night splint boot. After a few nights of trying to get a restful
night sleep in boot he realized there had to be a better way. One night,
literally in the middle of the night, he crawled out of bed, pulled a long tube
sock from his dresser drawer. He gently woke my mother and asked where he could
find a strip of fabric about so-long. She told him where to find it and warned
him that if he broke her sewing machine there would be hell to pay in the
morning, turned away and went back to sleep. Dad worked for a bit until he had
rigged together something that he thought would hold his foot in the same
position as the boot, just do it more comfortably. He slipped it on his leg and
went back to sleep. When he woke up the next morning he noticed that his foot
did feel a little better. He continued to wear it for the next few nights,
after which the morning pain totally went away. He was so excited that he made
a comfortable alternative he could comfortably wear. He didn't know that there
was more to the story than just comfort.
The Windlass Effect
What
dad didn't know is that the reason the sock worked so well was because of
something called the Windlass Mechanism. First described in the medical
literature by Dr. Hicks way back in 1954, it basically
can be described as a tightening of the plantar fascia by bending your toes
backwards towards you knee. You can see it in action by doing this: Place one
hand in the middle of your arch. Use the other hand to pull your toes back.
That band of tissue that tightens and pops up out of the bottom of your arch is
your plantar fascia. Most night splints are rigid on the bottom, where you put
your arch. When dad created the sock in a effort to
make it more comfortable he didn't put anything rigid on the bottom. The effect
is that the stretch applied is focused on the toes rather the foot and ankle,
the windlass mechanism is engaged, and the plantar fascia is directly stretched
while sleeping. Just like we used before in the knuckle example, allowing the
fascia to heal in a stretched position at night speeds recovery and maintains
the benefits of any daytime treatments.
The
Research Study
There have been several studies on the
effectiveness of night splints. The study that was done on the Strassburg Sock was the largest, independent peer-reviewed
night splint study done to date. It was published in the Oct 2002 issue of the
Journal of Foot and Ankle Surgery. In the study done on 160 patients, half the
patients wore the sock at night for at least 6 hours and half were given a
stretching regimen as initial therapy. The initial intention was to create a
standardized 4 gradually more aggressive treatment regimen where the final step
if necessary would be surgery. Only problem was that the patients who wore the
sock were getting better….fast! In fact the results of the study were as
follows:
·
Average
recovery time with the Strassburg Sock 18.5 days vs.
58.6 days with the other group
·
97.8%
of patients using the sock recovered within 8 weeks.
·
100% of
the patients were able to wear the Strassburg Sock
for a minimum of 6 hours per night as prescribed by their podiatrist.
After
the results of this research study were published and subsequently picked up in
an article by Amby Burfoot of Runner's World Magazine, the Strassburg Sock has
gone on the help hundreds of thousands of runners and everyday people
effectively recover from plantar fasciitis. The Strassburg Sock is available in over 1,000 running and multi-sport retailers in the US and
Canada and 21 countries around the world.
Stop in
to FLEET FEET Sports today and let their FIT Professionals show you how the Strassburg Sock can get you moving again!