Quick answer: Foot Pain Retirement Active Aging has multiple potential causes including mechanical, neurological, vascular, and inflammatory. The most common causes we identify are overuse, ill-fitting shoes, and biomechanical imbalance. Red flags requiring urgent evaluation: warmth/redness (infection), inability to bear weight (fracture), and unilateral swelling without injury (DVT). Call (810) 206-1402.
Watch: How to Cure Plantar Fasciitis in One Week? [FAST Heel Pain Relief!] — MichiganFootDoctors YouTube
Retirement Foot Pain
Quick Answer: Retirement = more time for activities, often more foot pain. Common: PF flares from new walking routines, pickleball injuries, travel foot pain. Address proactively to enjoy retirement years fully.
Active Years Ahead
Retirement should be active years. Foot pain limits everything. Treat it.
FAQ
Should I slow down?
No — modify if needed but stay active.
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📞 Call (810) 206-1402
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Frequently Asked Questions
When should I see a doctor?
See a podiatrist if pain persists past 2 weeks, prevents normal activity, or is accompanied by red-flag symptoms (warmth, swelling, numbness, inability to bear weight).
Can I treat this at home?
Mild cases respond to RICE protocol (rest, ice, compression, elevation), supportive shoes, and OTC anti-inflammatories. Persistent symptoms need professional evaluation.
How long does it take to heal?
Most soft tissue injuries resolve in 2-6 weeks with appropriate care. Bone injuries take 6-12 weeks. Chronic conditions need longer-term management.