Plantar heel pain is one of the most common foot ailments, affecting
about 4 percent of the population and an even higher proportion of
elderly people and athletes, researchers note in the British Journal
of Sports Medicine. Many doctors recommend shoe inserts to ease this
pain by supporting the arches and taking pressure off the heel, but
research to date has been inconclusive about the effectiveness of
this approach.
For the current study, researchers analyzed data from 19 previously
published studies with a total of 1,660 participants. They found
moderate-quality evidence that orthotic shoe inserts worked better
than sham inserts at reducing pain after people had worn them for a
bit - from about 7 to 12 weeks of use.
For this same time frame, customized orthotics appeared a bit better
at easing pain than prefabricated versions, but the difference was
too small to rule out the possibility that it was due to chance, the
study also found.
“Our finding that foot orthoses can effectively reduce pain suggests
that they are a valid treatment option for plantar heel pain,” said
lead study author Glen Whittaker, a podiatry researcher at La Trobe
University in Victoria, Australia.
“Furthermore, because we found that contoured prefabricated foot
orthoses are as effective for plantar heel pain as customized foot
orthoses, prefabricated foot orthoses should be used initially
rather than customized foot orthoses because they cost less and are
immediately available,” Whittaker said by email.
The most common cause of heel pain is what’s known as plantar
fasciitis, which occurs when the ligament connecting the heel bone
to the toes gets strained, weakened, swollen and irritated or
inflamed.
Shoe inserts may reduce plantar heel pain by redistributing pressure
away from the bottom of the heel to the arch, and may also prevent
the arch from dropping, which could reduce tension in the plantar
fascia, Whittaker said.
Foot orthotics didn’t appear to help ease pain or improve function
after up to 6 weeks of use, or beyond 12 weeks of use, the study
also found.
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This suggests that patients who want to try orthotics might want to
initially use them in conjunction with medication to ease pain and
inflammation, Whittaker said. Other treatment options include
getting corticosteroid injections or using tape or a brace on the
foot to relieve pressure on the heel.
One limitation of the study is that it didn’t include data focused
specifically on sports-related pain, so it’s unclear if the results
would apply to athletes, the authors note.
It’s also possible that some people could get little or no benefit
from using the shoe inserts, the authors also conclude.
“The main take-home message for patients is that the evidence for
relief of plantar heel pain by orthotic treatment is weak,” said
Peter Cavanagh, a researcher in orthopedics and sports medicine at
the University of Washington in Seattle who wasn’t involved in the
study.
“Thus, their level of expectation for a cure of plantar heel pain by
using orthotics should be moderate,” Cavanagh said by email.
While it may make sense for patients to try over-the-counter
prefabricated shoe inserts before spending more on custom versions,
it’s also possible that seeing a health care provider first might
help people get a device that’s better suited to the shape of their
foot, Cavanagh added.
“Patients often try many different therapies sequentially or
simultaneously,” Cavanagh said. “Orthotics can reasonably be
considered to be one of them.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2zpoLM4 British Journal of Sports Medicine,
online September 21, 2017.
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