What is Causing My Heel Pain?

Lateral X-ray of a Calcaneum demonstrating a spur.

Image via Wikipedia

Heel pain can be caused by a number of factors.  One of the most common is a heel spur, medically referred to as a calcaneal spur.

A heel spur is an outgrowth of bone in the shape of a small spire.  If it’s at the bottom or side of the heel bone (calcaneous), it can be painful to walk.  It is thought that heel spurs form as a result of stress on a tendinous insertion into to the heel, but some heel spurs aren’t associated with the area where a tendon inserts into the heel.

Whenever offshoots of bone form (bone spurs), it is due to a history of stress to the bone, either gradual formation following a single impact trauma such as a car accident; or cumulative impact forces over time, such as from sports.  For the foot bones, an example of the latter would be years of playing basketball or ballet dancing.  The repetitive pounding on the joints of the foot can cause bone cells at the impact area to secrete more bone matrix as a compensatory response.  In the spine and large weight bearing joints (knee, hip) they are called osteophytes.

In some cases, the heel spur stops producing pain; perhaps due to resorbption or even callous formation neutralizing its ability to press against tissue. For those that don’t, surgery can be done by a podiatrist or orthopedic surgeon to smooth down the heel spur.

TREATMENT:

In the meantime, avoiding impact trauma to the heel is important (running, jumping).  You can buy special shoe inserts that help reduce pressure on the heel spur.  Comfortable shoes are a must as well; make sure they are wide and have a thick rubber, shock absorbing sole.  The Z-Coil shoe brand incorporates a large spring at the heel to minimize shock/ impact forces to the foot when walking.

Sitting in a chair and rolling a cold beer or soda can (unopened) under your foot can help stretch the foot and ease some of the pain.  A golf ball can provide more focused massage to the bottom of the foot.  Press downward with enough pressure to get a good stretch and massage, but not so much to increase the heel pain.

Dorsal and plantar aspects of foot

Image via Wikipedia

Lastly, consider exercising your feet by walking barefoot around the house and outside (walking barefoot indoors is not as effective due to the flatness of the floor; bumpy and uneven is better).  Walking in shoes actually weaken the foot over time by preventing the intrinsic foot muscles and joints from exercising and experiencing their full range of motion.  You can also consider getting the Vibram foot glove.  This interesting shoe fits on your foot like a glove, allowing some independent movement of the toes.

Plantar fascitis is a condition where the plantar fascia (a wide, band-like ligament connecting the heel to the forefoot) pulls off a thin layer of periosteum (membrane lining the bone) from the heel and results in inflammation and pain at the front, bottom part of the heel.  It can make walking very uncomfortable.

The best approach to treating plantar fascitis is to rest your foot for a few days:  no running, no walking up hill; walk only on flat surfaces.  Use Red Light Therapy and Pulsed EMF for 15 minutes, twice a day for 2-3 weeks to accelerate healing of tissues, and for reducing any inflammation that is causing pain.  Red light therapy uses photobiomodulation to accelerate cell metabolism; thus accelerating healing of tissues.

Compression fractures and hairline (stress) fractures can also cause heel pain.  If you think you’ve fracture your heelbone, have it X-rayed.   You’ll likely get a foot cast, avoid impact to the heel for several months, and wait until the fracture heals (no pun intended).

If your heel bone fractures easily, it could be due to a bone cysts.  See your doctor on solutions for dealing with bone cysts.

Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

A rigid splint can keep the wrist straight.

Image via Wikipedia

Carpal tunnel syndrome is a condition where one of the major nerves of the arm gets compressed in the wrist.  It can lead to pain, numbness, and tingling in the hands.  Advanced symptoms are muscle weakness in the hands, muscle atrophy (shrinking), especially of the thumb pad;  and loss of motor coordination in fine dexterity skills, like buttoning a blouse.

The three main nerves that are responsible for controlling the arm are the ulnar, median, and radial nerves.  The median nerve, like its name implies, travels down the middle of the arm.  It passes through the carpal tunnel  which is just above the crease in the wrist before splitting into branches that go to the thumb, index, middle, and inner half of the ring finger.

The carpal tunnel is a small diameter hole formed by the wrist bones and the transverse carpal ligament.  It contains the tendons that flex the fingers (flexor tendons), and the median nerve.  Pressure as light as a penny can adversely affect nerve tissue, so any pressure increase in the carpal tunnel will over time injure the median nerve.

The most common cause of increased pressure in the carpal tunnel is thickening of the flexor tendons due to long term repetitive use of the fingers such as in typing.  Over time the tendons press the median nerve against the rigid transverse carpal ligament.  The nerve loses oxygen and it starts to malfunction.  Left alone, the damage will be permanent as nerves have a limited ability to regenerate.

Other possible causes are prior injury to the wrist that narrows the carpal tunnel and arthritic or other pathological changes in the wrist bones that cause them to occlude the tunnel.

Pregnancy and thyroid conditions may mimic symptoms of carpal tunnel syndrome.

TREATMENT:

Scars from carpal tunnel release surgery. Two ...

Image via Wikipedia

If the symptoms are advanced (pain, numbness, tingling especially at NIGHT and loss of hand coordination and muscle atrophy) see your doctor.  The doctor should refer you to a hand specialist who may order a nerve conduction test to diagnose carpal tunnel syndrome.  If your test is positive, you may be referred for physical therapy, which will involve mostly stretching and hand exercises.  If that doesn’t work, you may be offered a cortisone injection and exercise prescription, a wrist brace and orders to avoid prolonged hand usage.  The last option is carpal tunnel release surgery, where the transverse carpal ligament is surgically cut to relieve pressure in the tunnel.

If your condition is not advanced, do the following:

If your job or hobby requires lots of finger and hand activity, there is a good chance that this is the cause of your symptoms.  Check your work station set up and ensure the following:

a.  Keyboard should be low enough so that your fingers are at the level of the keyboard when:

  • your upper arms and shoulders are relaxed; your upper arms (above the elbow) are to the side of your body almost touching;
  • your elbows are bent 90-100 degrees
  • your wrists are straight or even bent slightly downward

The most important part is having your shoulders relaxed.  To see if you are doing it right, using your right hand press the top of your left upper shoulder, from the neck down to the shoulder joint.  It should be relatively soft.  If it is not, you are unconsciously contracting the neck and upper trapezius muscles and lifting the arm.

If you find you can’t accomplish the above, due to your desk being too high, you need to get an adjustable keyboard tray and install it under your desk.  Place the keyboard on this tray and lower and angle the tray so that you can meet these requirements (see video below on how to do this).

b.  The top 1/3 of your monitor screen should be at eye level.  Use phone books or a monitor lift to get it to this position.   Place the monitor close enough that you don’t  have to bend your neck forward to see text on your screen, or adjust your screen settings to magnify the text.

c. The mouse and frequently used equipment should be close so that you don’t have to reach forward for them.  Your keyboard tray should have an attached mouse pad; use it.

d. Remember to keep your head in a position where your ears are directly over your shoulders.

e. Every few minutes, relax your hands and wrists for 20-30 seconds.

f. Every hour do the wrist, neck and shoulder exercises in the video.

g. When symptoms are gone, you can do wrist strengthening exercises.

Exercise for Thoracic Outlet Syndrome

The thoracic outlet is an “opening” at the base of the neck, on both sides, where the nerves and artery that service the arm on that side exit through as they descend into the arm.  It is formed by the anterior and medial scalene muscles, the first rib, and the clavicle (collar bone).

If the thoracic outlet narrows in any way, due to one or more of these structures, neurovascular compression is possible (compression of the nerves and artery).  This can result in shoulder pain, neck pain, weakness in the affected arm and hand, numbness and tingling in the arm down to the hands, especially the last three fingers; and in some cases swelling of the arm.  Carrying something like a heavy bag on the affected shoulder makes the symptoms worse.

In thoracic outlet syndrome there is usually a history of prior injury/trauma to the shoulder girdle, such as a car accident or sports injury.  People with long necks and long arms are said to be more predisposed to this condition as the weight of the arm and length of the neck tend to put more stress in the thoracic outlet area.

Left alone without resolution, it is possible to develop permanent nerve damage resulting in chronic pain, weakness in the arm and hand, and reduced sensation in the inner arm area.

What to Do if You Suspect You Have Thoracic Outlet Syndrome

If you suspect you have thoracic outlet syndrome, see your doctor or an experienced chiropractor.  There are some simple orthopedic tests that can be done to see if you likely have TOS.  An MRI study can help visualize the thoracic outlet and identify if there is swelling; and needle electromyograph (EMG) can determine if the arm muscles are getting the proper amount of nerve flow.

If the diagnosis is confirmed, physical therapy exercises are usually prescribed to help open the thoracic outlet space.   In some cases, imaging studies show a fibrous band  responsible for compressing the neurovascular structure; in these cases surgery may be an option.  This involves the scalene muscles — three, short muscles that connect the lower neck vertebrae to the ribcage.

In the meantime, try doing this exercise.  It is designed to create more space between the collar bone and the ribcage.  If this is where your compression is occurring, it may help.

 

How to Stop Tension Headaches

Headaches come in many different forms; too many to include in one post.

The causation can be neurological, vascular, mechanical, chemical and even psychosomatic.  Diagnosis can be challenging, as most headaches have the common symptom of, well, head ache.  The factors that vary include duration, location of pain (back of head, front of head, one side of head), pain pattern (constant, pulsating, repeating), and accompanying symptoms (dizziness, nausea, sensitivity to light and sound, auras).

This post is about tension headaches, perhaps the most common type.

Symptoms include constant, pressure like pain often described as a tightening band around the head.  The muscles of the back of the neck and tops of the shoulders are usually hypertonic (tense and taught).   Pain is felt behind the eyes.  Tension headaches can be mild to the point where the person goes on about his day until it wears off; or they can be intense and incapacitating, causing the person to take aspirin or Tylenol.

It is generally believed that tension headaches can be triggered by stress, dehydration, working in front of a bright computer monitor for extended periods; looking at a screen (TV, computer, movie screen) that has constantly moving images with changing light; and engaging in heavy mental tasks (studying, calculating numbers, reading conceptually-complex material like law cases, etc.).

More esoteric causes are previous trauma that affected the neck, like a car crash, and environmental stimuli (pollen, mites, carpet fumes, atomized copier toner, exposure to hazardous chemicals).

In my experience, people who have a history of severe whiplash from a car accident are more likely to have recurring tension headaches.  Even if the accident was ten or more years ago.

Whiplash is the violent, alternating extension and flexion of the neck due to a short but powerful impact force or short acceleration-deceleration.  Low impact car accidents and a jerky roller coaster ride are common examples.

The accident can leave the cervical (neck) vertebrae out of proper position relative to adjacent vertebrae, and change the dynamics of neck movement.  Nerves that regulate muscle contraction in the neck and and back of head can get injured or stretched as a result, and can cause the muscles to stiffen during certain times.

TREATMENT:

If you are engaging in heavy mental activities, give yourself a couple of hours break.  Turn off the TV; stay away from the computer and all screens for that matter.  Basically, you want to shut off excessive visual stimulation.

Seek silence and solace.  Find a nice park,  go for a nature hike.  Another option– meditate in a dark room; concentrate on deep breathing and  relaxing the muscles in the back of your neck and throughout your body.  Drink water throughout the day.  No coffee or cigarettes; they are stimulants.  No alcohol.

Place an ice pack on your forehead (put kitchen towelette on your forehead to prevent ice burn), OR one under your neck with a cervical roll supporting it (DON’T do both, the coldness may be too much stimuli).

If you have a history of a whiplash car accident, and you get tension headaches quite regularly, there’s a very good chance you have misaligned cervical vertebrae affecting your cord and/or nerve roots.   Probably a “reversed” curve, which looks like a “kink” or sudden angle change on a side-view neck x-ray. You will want to do exercises to stretch the neck and get it back to a lordotic curved shape.

Use a neck roll to bend your neck into a lordotic (reverse C- shape) curve while lying on your back on the floor.  Simply touch the floor with the back of your head ten times by arching your neck over the roll.  Then, turn and stretch your neck to the left and hold for 2 seconds; then to the right and hold for 2 seconds; 10 times to each side.  Do 3-4 times throughout the day.

You may also consider getting evaluated by an experienced chiropractor, and definitely getting a neck x-ray to visualize the shape of your cervical spine.   Adjustments, exercises, and lordotic traction can help bring your neck into proper alignment, and reduce pressure to your nerves, saving you from those annoying headaches.

Lastly, consider using red light and pulsed EMF to eliminate tension headaches.  This is a good investment if you have recurring headaches.

Red light therapy is using 630 nm wavelength light to reduce pain and inflammation.  Light at this wavelength gets absorbed by cell structures and basically increases circulation, vasodilates blood vessels and dampens inflammation.  Some tension headaches are vascular in nature, so this should help reduce symptoms.

Pulsed EMF is the application of weak electromagnetic fields to the body, to provide extra energy for cells needing it.  It tends to improve cell membrane transport of nutrients and waste, and improve molecular transport including red blood cell mobility.

Watch this video I made that explains how to do it:

How to Tell if Your Pain is from Arthritis

Arthrite rhumatoide Source: http://nihseniorhe...

Image via Wikipedia

If you have deep, achy pain in a joint that doesn’t go away with time it’s likely some form of arthritis.  Lower back pain can be arthritic in nature (as opposed to muscle) if it behaves similarly– deep, achy, doesn’t seem to ever go away entirely; and you have a history of repetitive, physical impact to your body such as construction workers/ laborers, martial art practitioners and gymnasts.  However, with rheumatoid arthritis (explained below) no history of trauma is necessary.

Most people associate arthritis with the elderly.  But did you know it can affect younger people as well?

The word arthritis translates to “joint inflammation.”  There are several forms of arthritis, the two most common types being rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis.

Diagram of a synovial (diarthrosis) joint.

Image via Wikipedia

Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is an auto-immune disorder, where the body’s white blood cells attack the synovium of synovial joints.  Synovium is the inner lining of a synovial joint— encased (capsular) joints like in the spine, hips, knees and shoulders.  The synovium produces synovial fluid, which lubricates the inner surfaces of the joint as it moves.

People suffering from rheumatoid arthritis will have  bouts of severe joint swelling, redness, heat and pain.  RA is typically bilateral; meaning, for the extremities it strikes both sides, not just one.  It is an awful condition that can can severely impact mobility.  Those with rheumatoid arthritis in the knuckles of the hand will have difficulty gripping things and doing fine dexterity movements such as writing and buttoning a shirt.  Areas commonly affected by rheumatoid arthritis are the hands, spine, and feet.

Currently, drugs are the only medical treatment for RA including non-steroidal anti-inflammatories– NSAIDS (aspirin, Motrin, Tylenol, Ibuprofen), corticosteroids and immunosuppressives.

Palliative care to manage pain levels include acupuncture, yoga, and chiropractic.  Cannabis (medical marijuana) is a popular choice for many sufferers.

Osteoarthritis (OA) is described as joint pain and inflammation from wear and tear of the cartilage.  It is usually found in people who have suffered repeated joint trauma, like football and basketball players.  Marathon runners can develop it in the knees and hips as well.  OA is found in the weight bearing joints of the feet, ankle, knees, hips, lower spine and neck.

When repeated trauma impacts a weight bearing joint, over time it creates tiny fissures in the cartilage, which thins the cartilage and exposes the bone underneath.  From there, the bone forms bone spurs called osteophytes.  Radiologists describe these changes (disc degeneration plus osteophytes) as spondylosis of the joint.

Both types of joints can be painful, with RA being more acutely painful.  The symptoms are pain, joint stiffness and reduced range of motion.

MAKING BONE BROTH SOUP FOR ARTHRITIS PAIN:

In both cases, eating a low-inflammation diet will be helpful:  reduce sugar intake including high fructose corn syrup; limit carbohydrates to 150 grams per day; emphasize protein and fat, especially fish with high Omega 3 content; nut oils (walnut, almond, Brazil nuts), virgin olive oil, and raw plants (green leafy salads, lightly steamed vegetables).   Raw milk and butter from grass fed cows, and coconut oil are also good for an anti-inflammatory diet.

Eating  bone broth soup every day will give your body the constituents for rebuilding cartilage:  Visit your local butcher and ask for the large beef and pork joints.  They can saw these in little pieces in the back and give them to you in a bag; they price them pretty cheap; too!

You’d be amazed as to how cow/ pig knee and hip joints look very much like a human’s.  If you want to understand the anatomy of these joints, this is a great way to do it.  You will see and feel the smoothness of the cartilage on the femur head.  You’ll see the anterior and posterior cruciate ligaments (ACLs and PCLs).  You will see the patella, fat pad; and collateral ligaments, condyles and meniscus.  Make sure to eat all of these parts in addition to drinking the broth to get all the proteins needed to rebuild tendons, ligaments and cartilage.

MAKING THE BROTH:

Add a couple of pieces of joints into a tall pot; fill half-way with water; add salt.  For extra bone-building strength add some eggshells (from cracked RAW eggs– You want the inner shell membrane to be intact; with boiled eggs the nutrient-rich membrane sticks to the egg).  Bring to a strong boil; reduce heat to low and cook for 60 minutes.  Steep out the eggshells, and drink the soup.  Eat any pieces of tendon stuck to the bones, and eat the bone marrow as well.  You can add spinach to the soup the last minute of boiling for more variety. (chicken and turkey carcasses and whole fish bones work well, too).

The calcium and cartilage nutrients you get from this bone broth can help your joints feel better.

HOME THERAPY FOR ARTHRITIS

Arthritis pain comes from inflammation and stimulation of pain receptors in damaged cartilage by the inflammation and also by physical abrasion.

Pulsed electromagnetic field therapy (Pulsed EMF or PEMF) can help by energizing the affected cells.  The electromagnetic field produced by PEMF machines are similar to the naturally-occurring fields produced by the biological activity of your cells; adding an external source helps those cells function better.  The few cells that exist in the cartilage and ligaments and tendons have more energy to synthesize matrix and collagen which goes towards joint rebuilding.  Use in conjunction with red light therapy for maximum effect.  Red light at around 660 nm wavelength initiates photobiomodulation, which also gives cells more energy to function, much like photosynthesis in plants.

For temporary relief, heat works best with chronic pain and stiffness.  An infrared heat lamp is a good choice, as it is easy to set up and penetrates all the way down to the affected tissue, unlike a hot pack which only heats the skin.  Heating is not advised for rheumatoid arthritis when it is in a flare-up, hot and acute phase.

As far as medical care, joint replacement is a more drastic option but can effectively reduce pain while preserving some joint functionality.  There are also experimental procedures that involve culturing cartilage cells in a lab and injecting them into the joint space, hoping that they will bond to existing cartilage and thicken, but results are mixed at this point.

If you don’t have arthritis, do things that will help prevent you for getting it.  Build up your joint strength with the diet mentioned above, and avoid repetitious trauma to the weight bearing joints (activities that involve jumping and landing on a hard surface).  Strengthen surrounding ligaments of your knee and hip joints with exercises like weightless squats, knee bends, and simple uphill hiking.

Your joints are the most neglected part of your body; we often take them for granted.  But when one is injured or develops arthritis, you will realize very quickly how important they are to your happiness and well-being.  Don’t wait until it is too late; strengthening and nurturing your joints should be a definite part of your fitness routine.

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