The most important clinical decision with Achilles Tendinopathy Guide Treatment isn’t which treatment to start with — it’s identifying the correct subtype. That changes everything. Call (810) 206-1402.
Dr. Tom’s Top Bob and Brad Massage Guns (2026)
Medically reviewed by Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM
Board-certified podiatric surgeon | Balance Foot & Ankle
Last reviewed: May 2026
Affiliate disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, Balance Foot & Ankle earns from qualifying purchases. Bob and Brad are physical therapists whose products I trust for self-care between visits.
Dr. Tom’s Top Pain Relief Picks — Dr. Hoy’s (2026)
Affiliate disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, Balance Foot & Ankle earns from qualifying purchases. I personally use Dr. Hoy’s in my practice for patients who need topical relief.
| Product | Best For | Dr. Tom’s Take | Get It |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dr. Hoy’s Natural Pain Relief Gel 3.5oz menthol + arnica |
Plantar fasciitis · Achilles tendonitis · Sore muscles · Joint pain | My go-to topical. Cooling-then-warming sensation. No greasy residue. Non-NSAID alternative. | Buy Now |
| Dr. Hoy’s Arnica Boost 8oz with extra arnica |
Bruising · Post-injury · Sprains · Stress fractures (pain only) | Higher arnica concentration speeds recovery from acute injury. Use 4x daily for first 7 days. | Buy Now |
| Dr. Hoy’s Cooling Pain Relief 8oz extra menthol |
Acute inflammation · Hot/swollen feet · Post-run cooldown | Stronger cooling effect for acute swelling. Pair with ice for first 48 hours after injury. | Buy Now |
| Dr. Hoy’s Roll-On Pain Relief Roller applicator |
Mess-free application · Travel · Office use · No-touch hygiene | My patients love this for travel. Glides on without hand contact — cleanest application available. | Buy Now |
| Dr. Hoy’s Family Size 14oz pump bottle |
Frequent users · Multiple family members · Best value per ounce | If anyone in your home uses pain cream regularly, this is the most economical size. Same formula. | Buy Now |
Why I recommend Dr. Hoy’s over Biofreeze and Bengay: Cleaner ingredient list (no parabens, no synthetic dyes), longer-lasting effect, and the cooling-then-warming dual sensation actually addresses both inflammation and circulation. After 10 years of recommending different topicals, this is the one I keep coming back to.
Quick Compare: Dr. Tom’s Top Running Shoes
| Shoe | Best For | Watch Out For | Buy | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hoka Bondi 9 | Plantar fasciitis, max cushion | Heavy, tall stack | Buy | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Brooks Ghost 17 | Neutral runners, first running shoe | Not for 200+lb runners | Buy | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Brooks Adrenaline GTS 23 | Flat feet, overpronation | Snug toe box | Buy | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Altra Torin 8 | Wide feet, bunions, Morton’s toe | Zero-drop transition | Buy | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Hoka Clifton 10 | Daily training, lighter Hoka | Less cushion than Bondi | Buy | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| NB 990v6 | Senior fall prevention, 6E width |
Dr. Tom’s Top Pain Relief Picks — Dr. Hoy’s (2026)Affiliate disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, Balance Foot & Ankle earns from qualifying purchases. I personally use Dr. Hoy’s in my practice for patients who need topical relief.
Why I recommend Dr. Hoy’s over Biofreeze and Bengay: Cleaner ingredient list (no parabens, no synthetic dyes), longer-lasting effect, and the cooling-then-warming dual sensation actually addresses both inflammation and circulation. After 10 years of recommending different topicals, this is the one I keep coming back to. 75-200, not for running |
Buy |
For full detailed reviews with pros/cons/Dr. Tom’s tips, see our complete shoe guide.
Medically reviewed by Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM · Board-Certified Podiatric Surgeon · Last reviewed: April 2026 · Editorial Policy
Related Conditions
Quick Answer
Achilles Tendinopathy — Mid-Substance vs. Insertional relates to Achilles tendonitis — typically caused by sudden activity increase. Most patients improve in 8-12 weeks with conservative care. Same-week appointments in Howell + Bloomfield Hills: (810) 206-1402.
Medically reviewed by Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM — Board-certified foot & ankle surgeon, 3,000+ surgeries performed. Updated April 2026 with current clinical evidence. This article reflects real practice experience from Balance Foot & Ankle Specialists in Howell and Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.
Quick Answer
Achilles tendonitis causes pain and stiffness at the back of the heel along the Achilles tendon. Eccentric heel drops plus heel lifts resolve most cases within 6-12 weeks. See a podiatrist same-day for a sudden “pop” sound or inability to push off — that may be a rupture.
Watch: Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM
✅ Medically reviewed by Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM — Board-Certified Podiatrist · Last updated April 6, 2026
Best Products for Achilles Tendinopathy — Dr. For specialized treatment, see our Achilles tendinopathy treatment Michigan. Tom’s Picks 2026
🏆 Tuli’s Classic Heel Cups — Best Heel Lift for Achilles Relief
Why Dr. Tom recommends it: Heel lifts reduce tension on the Achilles tendon by slightly elevating the heel and shortening the tendon’s stretch angle during walking. In our clinic, we use these as a first-line off-loading tool for insertional Achilles tendinopathy — they provide immediate load reduction without restricting gait. The Tuli’s waffle design also absorbs ground reaction forces that would otherwise transmit up the tendon with each step.
★★★★★ Clinical Grade — Recommended to the majority of patients with insertional Achilles tendinopathy
✅ Best for: Insertional Achilles pain (at the back of the heel), patients who spend long hours on their feet, and those beginning an eccentric exercise protocol who need immediate load reduction alongside rehabilitation.
⚠️ Not ideal for: Mid-substance Achilles tendinopathy (above the heel insertion) — heel lifts have minimal mechanical effect on mid-portion pathology. Also avoid in patients with Haglund’s deformity, where heel elevation may worsen shoe pressure against the bony prominence.
📍 Located in Michigan?
Our board-certified podiatrists treat this condition at two convenient locations. Same-day appointments often available.
💡 Pro tip: Wear heel lifts in both shoes, not just the painful side — asymmetric heel elevation creates a functional leg-length discrepancy that can shift compensatory load problems to the opposite hip and knee.
🏆 Vive Plantar Fasciitis Night Splint — Best Overnight Achilles Stretch
Why Dr. Tom recommends it: Night splints hold the ankle in a neutral or slightly dorsiflexed position during sleep, delivering a sustained low-load stretch to the Achilles tendon and calf complex. This prevents the overnight shortening that causes significant first-step morning pain. We prescribe night splints specifically to patients whose Achilles pain is worst in the morning — consistent use typically produces noticeable improvement within 4–6 weeks, and the data supports its use as a first-line adjunct to eccentric loading.
★★★★★ Clinical Grade — Recommended for morning-dominant Achilles tendinopathy symptoms
✅ Best for: Patients with significant morning stiffness and first-step pain, chronic insertional tendinopathy that hasn’t responded to daytime treatment alone, and runners who cannot maintain consistent daytime stretching routines.
⚠️ Not ideal for: Patients with significant ankle swelling, poor tolerance for rigid appliances during sleep, or confirmed Achilles rupture — a splint requires an intact tendon. If you heard or felt a pop, see us before using any brace.
💡 Pro tip: Pair the night splint with 3 sets of eccentric heel drops before bed — the combination of progressive loading plus overnight sustained stretch accelerates recovery significantly compared to either intervention used alone.
🏆 Doctor Hoy’s Natural Pain Relief Gel — Best Topical for Achilles Flare-Ups
Why Dr. Tom recommends it: Doctor Hoy’s Natural Pain Relief Gel uses menthol to activate cold receptors in the skin, creating a counter-irritant effect that interrupts pain signal transmission through the gate-control mechanism. For Achilles tendinopathy, topical application before activity reduces perceived pain enough to allow completion of therapeutic exercise — which is the actual treatment. We recommend it specifically as a pre-exercise tool, not a standalone therapy, and it is far preferable to NSAIDs for patients who need to train through managed discomfort.
★★★★★ Clinical Grade — Recommended as an adjunct to eccentric exercise-based Achilles rehabilitation
✅ Best for: Managing pain during the early phases of eccentric exercise rehabilitation, post-activity soreness control in chronic cases, and patients who want to avoid oral NSAIDs or need additional pain modulation during flare-up periods.
⚠️ Not ideal for: Patients with hypersensitive skin or cold allergy. Not a substitute for the eccentric loading protocol — if you are applying Doctor Hoy’s Natural Pain Relief Gel but not progressively loading the tendon, you are managing symptoms without treating the underlying tendinopathy.
💡 Pro tip: Apply 15–20 minutes before your eccentric calf drop sets, not immediately after — this gives the menthol time to reach peak analgesic effect so you can complete more quality reps with less pain-driven movement compensation.
When products aren’t enough: If you have used these consistently for 6 weeks without meaningful improvement, there is likely a structural or biomechanical driver that products alone cannot resolve. We can usually identify it in a single evaluation. Book a same-day appointment → · Howell & Bloomfield Hills, MI
Related Patient Guides
- Achilles Tendonitis: Complete Treatment Guide
- Shockwave Therapy for Foot & Ankle Pain
- MLS Laser Therapy for Foot Pain
- The Complete Guide to Custom Orthotics
- Ankle Sprain Recovery: Week-by-Week Guide
Insurance Accepted
BCBS · Medicare · Aetna · Cigna · United Healthcare · HAP · Priority Health · Humana · View All →
Howell Office
4330 E Grand River Ave
Howell, MI 48843
Get Directions →
Bloomfield Hills Office
43494 Woodward Ave, #208
Bloomfield Hills, MI 48302
Get Directions →
Your Board-Certified Podiatrists
Ready to Get Back on Your Feet?
Same-week appointments available at both locations.
In-Office Treatment at Balance Foot & Ankle
If home care isn’t resolving your Achilles tendon pain, a visit with a board-certified podiatrist is the fastest path to accurate diagnosis and a personalized plan. At Balance Foot & Ankle Specialists, Dr. Tom Biernacki, Dr. Carl Jay, and Dr. Daria Gutkin offer same-day and next-day appointments at both our Howell and Bloomfield Hills offices. We perform on-site diagnostic ultrasound, digital X-ray, conservative care, advanced regenerative treatments, and minimally invasive surgery when indicated.
Call (810) 206-1402 or request an appointment online. Most insurance plans accepted, including Medicare, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Aetna, Cigna, and United Healthcare.
Differential Diagnosis: What Else Could It Be?
Several conditions share symptoms with Achilles Tendonitis and are commonly misdiagnosed in the first office visit. Considering these alternatives is part of every Balance Foot & Ankle exam:
- Haglund’s deformity. Bony bump at the back of the heel rubbing against the shoe counter.
- Insertional vs. mid-substance Achilles. Insertional pain at the heel bone responds differently than mid-tendon pain 4–6 cm above.
- Retrocalcaneal bursitis. Fluid-filled bursa anterior to the tendon — squeeze pain with side-to-side compression.
If your symptoms don’t fit the textbook pattern, ask your podiatrist which differentials they ruled out — that conversation often shortcuts months of trial-and-error treatment.
In Our Clinic
Most Achilles tendonitis patients we see at Balance Foot & Ankle are recreational runners in their 40s or 50s who ramped up mileage too quickly, plus a second cohort of middle-aged women who recently switched from heels to flat shoes. The first question we ask is whether the pain is at the insertion on the heel bone versus 2–6 cm up the mid-substance — the treatment ladder is genuinely different. Eccentric heel-drops, heel lifts, and a soft-strike gait retraining pass resolve ~80 % of cases. The ones who aren’t improving by week 8 usually have an unrecognized Haglund’s deformity or insertional calcific tendinosis that needs imaging.
Most Common Mistake We See
The most common mistake we see is: Stretching the Achilles into pain during rehab. Fix: eccentric heel drops performed pain-free, 3 sets of 15, twice daily, straight-knee and bent-knee.
Warning Signs That Need Same-Day Care
Seek immediate evaluation at Balance Foot & Ankle if you experience any of the following:
- Pop or snap with sudden inability to push off
- Loss of active plantarflexion
- Significant swelling within 24 hours
- Rest or night pain in the tendon
Call (810) 206-1402 — same-day and next-day appointments at our Howell and Bloomfield Hills offices.
More Podiatrist-Recommended Achilles Essentials
Achilles Night Splint
United Ortho dorsiflexion splint — reduces morning Achilles tendon stiffness.
Cushioned Running Shoe
Hoka Men’s Clifton 10 Black/White 10 Medium
- JACQUARD KNIT UPPER
- Lining Textile
Hoka Clifton 10 — max-heel-cushion offloads the Achilles with every step.
Calf Foam Roller
Sale
TRIGGERPOINT Performance Therapy Grid Foam Roller for Exercise, Deep Tissue Massage and Muscle Recovery, Original (13-Inch), Camo
- Patented foam roller design offers a superior, multi-density exterior constructed over a rigid, hollow core
- Constructed from quality materials that won’t break down or lose shape from repeated use
- Includes access to free online instructional video library on foam rolling best practices from the experts at trigger point
- Trusted foam roller of physical and massage therapists, coaches, trainers and athletes
- Original Grid: Standard density, 13 x 5.5 inches, 500 pound weight limit; 1 year manufacturer’s warranty
TriggerPoint foam roller — releases calf tension that upstream-drives Achilles inflammation.
As an Amazon Associate, Balance Foot & Ankle earns from qualifying purchases. Product recommendations are based on clinical experience; prices and availability shown above update live from Amazon.

When to See a Podiatrist
Achilles tendonitis that lasts more than 3 months has usually caused structural tendon changes that heating and stretching can’t reverse. Balance Foot & Ankle offers shockwave therapy and ultrasound-guided PRP for chronic Achilles pain — both treatments rebuild tendon tissue without surgery. If you’ve been icing, stretching, and modifying activity without improvement, it’s time for an in-office evaluation.
Call Balance Foot & Ankle: (810) 206-1402 · Book online · Offices in Howell & Bloomfield Hills
Pros & Cons of Conservative Care for Achilles tendonitis
Advantages
- ✓ Eccentric heel drops 80%+ effective
- ✓ Conservative treatment first
- ✓ Strong recovery prognosis
Considerations
- ✗ Recovery 8-12 weeks typical
- ✗ Risk of rupture if ignored
- ✗ Surgery required if rupture
In This Article
- Quick Answer
- In-Office Treatment at Balance Foot & Ankle
- Differential Diagnosis: What Else Could It Be?
Several conditions share symptoms with Achilles Tendonitis and are commonly misdiagnosed in the first office visit. Considering these alternatives is part of every Balance Foot & Ankle exam:Haglund’s deformity. Bony bump at the back of the heel rubbing against the shoe counter.
Insertional vs. mid-substance Achilles. Insertional pain at the heel bone responds differently than mid-tendon pain 4–6 cm above.
Retrocalcaneal bursitis. Fluid-filled bursa anterior to the tendon — squeeze pain with side-to-side compression.If your symptoms don’t fit the textbook pattern, ask your podiatrist which differentials they ruled out — that conversation often shortcuts months of trial-and-error treatment.
In Our Clinic
Most Achilles tendonitis patients we see at Balance Foot & Ankle are recreational runners in their 40s or 50s who ramped up mileage too quickly, plus a second cohort of middle-aged women who recently switched from heels to flat shoes. The first question we ask is whether the pain is at the insertion on the heel bone versus 2–6 cm up the mid-substance — the treatment ladder is genuinely different. Eccentric heel-drops, heel lifts, and a soft-strike gait retraining pass resolve ~80 % of cases. The ones who aren’t improving by week 8 usually have an unrecognized Haglund’s deformity or insertional calcific tendinosis that needs imaging.Most Common Mistake We See
- Warning Signs That Need Same-Day Care
- Frequently Asked Questions
Dr. Tom’s Recommended Products for Achilles tendonitis
Affiliate disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, Balance Foot & Ankle earns from qualifying purchases. We only recommend products we use with patients.
TriggerPoint Footballer Dr. Tom’s Pick
Best for: Calf release + plantar release
Ready to Get Back on Your Feet?
Same-day appointments in Howell + Bloomfield Hills. Most insurance accepted. Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM & team.
Book Today — Same-Day Appointments Available
Call Now: (810) 206-1402
About Your Care Team at Balance Foot & Ankle
Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM · Board-Certified Foot & Ankle Surgeon. Specializes in conservative-first care, minimally invasive bunion surgery, and complex reconstruction.
Dr. Carl Jay, DPM · Accepting new patients. Specializes in sports medicine, athletic injuries, and routine podiatric care.
Dr. Daria Gutkin, DPM, AACFAS · Accepting new patients. Specializes in surgical reconstruction and pediatric podiatry.
Locations: 4330 E Grand River Ave, Howell, MI 48843 · 43494 Woodward Ave Suite 208, Bloomfield Hills, MI 48302
Hours: Mon–Fri 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM · (810) 206-1402
Dr. Tom’s Top 3 — The Premium Foot Pain Stack (2026)
If you only buy three things for foot pain, get these. PowerStep + CURREX orthotics correct the underlying foot mechanics, and Dr. Hoy’s pain gel delivers fast topical relief. This is the exact stack Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM gives his Michigan podiatry patients on visit one — over 10,000 patients have used this exact combination.
Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM is a board-certified podiatrist + Amazon Associate. Picks shown are products he prescribes to patients at Balance Foot & Ankle Specialists. We earn a commission on qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you. All products independently tested + reviewed for 30+ days minimum. Last verified: April 28, 2026.
PowerStep Pinnacle MaxxDr. Tom’s #1 Brand
4.5
(28,341+ reviews)
Dr. Tom’s most-prescribed OTC orthotic. Lateral wedge corrects overpronation that causes 90% of foot pain. Deep heel cradle stabilizes the ankle. Built by podiatrists, used by patients worldwide.
- Lateral wedge corrects pronation
- Deep heel cradle stabilizes ankle
- Dual-density EVA — comfort + support
- Trim-to-fit any shoe
- Used by 10,000+ podiatrists
- Trim-to-size required
- 5-7 day break-in for some
This single insole eliminates plantar fasciitis pain in 60% of patients within 2 weeks. The lateral wedge is the active ingredient — it stops the overpronation that causes the fascia to overstretch with every step. Pair with a max-cushion shoe for compound effect.
CURREX RunProDr. Tom’s #1 Brand
4.4
(4,000+ reviews)
3 arch heights for custom fit (Low/Med/High). Carbon-reinforced heel + dynamic forefoot — the closest OTC orthotic to a $500 custom orthotic. Engineered in Germany.
- 3 arch heights for custom fit
- Carbon-reinforced heel cup
- Dynamic forefoot zone
- Premium German engineering
- Sport-specific support
- Pricier than PowerStep
- 7-10 day break-in
Choose your arch height from a wet-foot test (low/med/high). Wrong arch = re-injury. For runners, athletes, or anyone who failed standard insoles — this is the closest you can get to custom orthotics without paying $500. The carbon heel is what professional athletes use.
Dr. Hoy’s Natural Pain Relief GelDr. Tom’s #1 Brand
4.6
(5,500+ reviews)
Menthol-based natural pain relief — Dr. Tom’s #1 brand for fast relief without greasy residue. Safe for diabetics + daily use. Cleaner formula than Voltaren or Biofreeze.
- Menthol-based natural formula
- No greasy residue
- Safe for diabetics
- Fast cooling relief — 5-10 minutes
- Cleaner ingredient list than Biofreeze
- Pricier than Biofreeze
- Strong menthol scent at first
Apply to plantar fascia + calves before bed. Combined with stretching, eliminates morning fascia pain. The clean formula means you can use it daily long-term — Voltaren has 30-day limits, Dr. Hoy’s doesn’t.
Frequently Asked Questions
What’s the difference between Achilles tendinitis and tendinosis?
Tendinitis is acute inflammation (early-stage, under 6 weeks). Tendinosis is chronic degeneration without active inflammation — collagen breakdown, microscopic tearing, thickening. This distinction is critical for treatment: tendinitis responds to rest and anti-inflammatories; tendinosis does NOT respond to NSAIDs or ice because there’s no active inflammation to suppress. Tendinosis requires eccentric loading therapy and often PRP to stimulate collagen repair. Many patients treat tendinosis like tendinitis for months, prolonging recovery unnecessarily.
Will Achilles tendinitis lead to a rupture?
Untreated Achilles tendinopathy increases rupture risk — but it’s not inevitable. Risk rises significantly when patients continue high-impact activity through moderate-to-severe pain, or return to sport before the tendon has healed. In our practice, patients who complete a structured eccentric loading protocol have roughly a 3% rupture rate. Those who ignore the condition and keep training have rates closer to 15–20%. Early treatment isn’t optional — it’s rupture prevention.
How long does Achilles tendinitis take to heal?
Insertional Achilles tendinitis (at the heel bone) typically takes longer than mid-portion tendinitis — often 3–6 months with consistent treatment. Mid-portion responds faster, usually 6–12 weeks. The biggest predictor of recovery time is how long you’ve had symptoms before starting treatment. Patients who begin care within 4 weeks recover twice as fast as those who wait 6+ months. Chronic tendinosis can require 12–18 months even with optimal care.
What is eccentric heel drop exercise and does it work?
Eccentric loading — raising on both feet on a step and lowering slowly on the injured foot alone — is the single most evidence-supported treatment for mid-portion Achilles tendinopathy. The Alfredson protocol (3 sets of 15 reps, twice daily, over 12 weeks) shows 60–80% success rates in research. The mechanism: controlled overload stimulates collagen remodeling and tendon thickening. It should be done on a step edge with a heel drop below level — flat-surface heel raises are significantly less effective.
Can I exercise with Achilles tendinitis?
Yes, with modification. Low-impact activity — swimming, cycling, elliptical — is generally well-tolerated and maintains fitness without loading the tendon. Running can often continue at reduced volume (30–40% less) if pain stays below 4/10 during activity. Plyometrics, hill running, and speed work should stop until the tendon is at least 70% healed. The key rule: some discomfort during eccentric exercises is acceptable; sharp or worsening pain means stop.
Should I use heat or ice for Achilles tendinitis?
For acute tendinitis (first 2–4 weeks): ice after activity to reduce inflammatory pain. For chronic tendinosis: heat before exercise to increase blood flow; ice after to reduce post-exercise soreness. Many patients with chronic tendinosis use ice exclusively and wonder why they’re not improving — cold vasoconstricts the tendon, reducing the blood flow that chronic degeneration requires to heal. If symptoms have been present more than 6 weeks, switch your protocol.
What shoes help Achilles tendinitis?
A heel lift of 8–12mm is the most impactful footwear modification — it reduces the mechanical stretch of the tendon during gait. Motion-control or stability shoes work better than neutral shoes for most patients. Avoid minimalist and zero-drop shoes entirely during treatment. Temporary heel lifts (3/8″) added to regular shoes are a quick way to assess whether elevation helps before investing in specific footwear.
What is PRP therapy and does it work for Achilles tendinopathy?
PRP (Platelet-Rich Plasma) involves drawing your blood, concentrating the growth factors via centrifuge, and injecting them into the tendon under ultrasound guidance. For chronic mid-portion Achilles tendinosis that hasn’t responded to 12+ weeks of eccentric exercise, PRP shows 60–75% success rates in systematic reviews. Results take 6–12 weeks to manifest. We use ultrasound guidance for all tendon injections to ensure accurate placement. PRP is generally not covered by insurance but is typically $400–700 per treatment.
Does Achilles tendinitis affect both feet?
Most cases are unilateral (one side), typically the dominant-leg side or the side of greater mechanical load. Bilateral Achilles tendinopathy can occur in runners who dramatically increase training volume, but also warrants evaluation for systemic conditions — particularly fluoroquinolone antibiotic use (ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin are known to weaken tendons), seronegative arthropathies, and hypothyroidism. If both tendons are symptomatic without a clear mechanical cause, a systemic workup is appropriate.
When does Achilles tendinopathy require surgery?
Surgery is considered after 6–12 months of failed conservative management. Procedures include debridement of degenerated tissue, calcification removal (for insertional tendinopathy), and in severe cases, tendon reconstruction with FHL transfer. About 10–15% of patients with Achilles tendinopathy eventually need surgery. The outcomes are generally good — 80–90% return to activity — but recovery takes 6–9 months. We always exhaust shockwave therapy and PRP before recommending surgery.
Is Achilles tendinitis related to plantar fasciitis?
They often co-occur and share common risk factors: tight calf muscles, overpronation, rapid training increases, and inadequate footwear. Mechanically, a tight gastrocnemius (calf) increases load on both the Achilles insertion and the plantar fascia. Treating one effectively often improves the other. If you have both conditions simultaneously, the rehabilitation protocol is similar — eccentric calf work and dorsiflexion stretching address both pathologies.
Get Expert Care at Balance Foot & Ankle
Same-week appointments at our Howell and Bloomfield Hills offices. Board-certified podiatric surgeons. Most insurance accepted.
Ready for Expert Care?
Same-day appointments in Howell & Bloomfield Hills, MI.
4.9★ | 1,123 Reviews | 3,000+ Surgeries
Or call: (810) 206-1402
Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM is a board-certified foot & ankle surgeon (ABFAS & ABPM) at Balance Foot & Ankle Specialists in Southeast Michigan. With over a decade of clinical experience, he specializes in heel pain, bunions, diabetic foot care, sports injuries, and minimally invasive surgery. Dr. Biernacki is a member of the APMA and ACFAS, and his patient education content on MichiganFootDoctors.com and YouTube has made him one of the most-followed foot & ankle educators on YouTube.





