Prevention & Recovery

Healthy feet: What you should know about podiatry

Healthy feet: What you should know about podiatry

Author: Canadian Living

Prevention & Recovery

Healthy feet: What you should know about podiatry

Given that the foot has 26 bones, 33 joints and more than 100 tendons, muscles and ligaments, it's no wonder so much can go wrong with this body part. In fact, there are more than 300 possible foot ailments. Since your feet need to last you a lifetime, preventive foot care – and early attention to foot problems – should be a top concern. Here's what you need to know about podiatry.

1. The practices of podiatry and chiropody share common elements, but there are significant differences.
For one thing, podiatry training takes longer; to obtain a doctor of podiatric medicine (DPM), you need an undergraduate degree in science and four years of podiatric medicine training in the United States (it's not available in Canada). Training for chiropody (leading to a diploma and the designation DCh) is available at only one Canadian centre (The Michener Institute for Applied Health Sciences in Toronto). Podiatry services are also more extensive than those offered by chiropodists. Regulation for both professions varies across Canada. Some provinces provide limited coverage for podiatric services, but in most cases, consumers have to pay themselves unless their private insurance covers it.

2. Foot problems can be grouped according to age and stage of development.
In children the problem might be flat feet or walking with an "in-toeing" (pigeon-toed) gait. Warts and ingrown toenails are another common complaint of kids. In addition to warts, adults come in with athlete's foot, fungal infections and structural problems such as bunions, hammertoes (where the toes contract as a result of an imbalance between tendons on the top and the bottom of the toe), heel spurs (growths on the underside of the heel bone) or neuromas (overgrowth of nerves around the bones). With seniors podiatrists help maintain good foot care. "They can't bend down and remove calluses or they develop very thick toenails, and they may have arthritis or issues with their eyesight," says Mario Turanovic, a podiatrist in Edmonton and president of the Canadian Podiatric Medical Association.

3. Regular foot care is extremely important for people with diabetes.
They may experience a loss of sensation (neuropathy) in their feet or develop sores, which can become seriously infected. Unfortunately, foot and leg amputations among people with diabetes are all too common. "Proper patient education and proper shoes for people with diabetes are essential," says Turanovic.


Page 1 of 2 – Learn expert tips for keeping your feet healthy and pain-free on page 2.

Orthotics (shoe inserts) can solve many foot problems, especially in children.
Orthotics help correct an abnormal gait by altering the alignment between the foot and the lower leg. These shoe inserts are used to treat such problems as plantar fasciitis (an inflammation of the long band of connective tissue running from the heel to the ball of the foot resulting in arch and heel pain), heel spurs and overpronation (in which the foot rolls inward too much when walking).

They also prevent problems affecting other areas of the body, such as "runner's knee" (pain beneath or on the sides of the kneecap caused by wear and tear on the cartilage under it). Orthotics may also correct flat feet in young children. Either custom-made or bought over-the-counter in a drugstore, orthotics may be rigid, semirigid or soft. If custom-made, they are usually made from a mould of the person's foot.

Basic foot care tips:
• Inspect your feet regularly. Discoloured or thickened nails may be a sign of a fungal infection, while peeling or scaling on the soles of the feet might signal athlete's foot.

• Wash feet regularly and dry them thoroughly, especially between the toes.

Trim toenails straight across, not too short and not in corners or on the sides, to prevent ingrown toenails.

• Make sure shoes fit properly. Buy new ones later in the day when feet are at their largest.

• Avoid high heels; they contribute to knee and back problems and may cause structural changes in feet that make walking permanently painful. If you must wear high heels, alternate them with more comfortable flats.

• Avoid wearing panty hose for lengthy periods; your feet may get overheated, which encourages fungal infections.

• Don't wear the same shoes every day so they get a chance to air out, and don't wear shoes beyond their "shelf life," when they no longer provide optimal cushioning and support.


Page 2 of 2

Comments

Share X
Prevention & Recovery

Healthy feet: What you should know about podiatry

Login