Medically reviewed by Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM
Board-certified podiatric surgeon | Balance Foot & Ankle, Howell & Bloomfield Hills, MI
Last reviewed: May 2026
Balance Foot & Ankle offers same-day appointments for urgent foot and ankle conditions across Southeast Michigan — but the most important factor in outcomes isn’t getting seen quickly. Our podiatrists explain what to do in the first 24-48 hours before your appointment that most patients skip entirely. Call (810) 206-1402 — expert podiatric care across Michigan.

Medically Reviewed | Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM | Board-Certified Podiatric Surgeon | Balance Foot & Ankle, Michigan

The most important clinical decision with Howell Township Michigan Podiatrist isn’t which treatment to start with — it’s identifying the correct subtype. That changes everything. Call (810) 206-1402.
Podiatry Care in Howell Township, Livingston County
Howell Township surrounds the vibrant city of Howell — the county seat of Livingston County — making Balance Foot & Ankle’s Howell office the most convenient podiatric practice for Howell Township residents. Dr. Tom Biernacki has built a reputation throughout Livingston County for thorough, patient-centered foot and ankle care that combines the expertise of a fellowship-trained surgeon with the personal attention of a community-based practice.
Comprehensive Foot Care for Howell Township
Howell Township’s diverse population — ranging from young athletes to retirees — presents the full spectrum of podiatric conditions. Active families seek care for youth sports injuries, shin splints, and growing pains. Adults with working lifestyles develop plantar fasciitis, heel spurs, and overuse tendon injuries. Older patients benefit from comprehensive bunion evaluation, hammertoe care, nail management, and diabetic foot assessment. Dr. Biernacki addresses all of these with equal expertise, providing in-office X-ray, ultrasound, custom orthotics lab, and minor surgical procedures to minimize the need for multiple referrals.
Livingston County’s Preferred Podiatrist
Balance Foot & Ankle has become Livingston County’s trusted podiatry practice through consistent excellence, transparent communication, and results. Patients from Howell Township, Brighton, Hamburg Township, Hartland, and surrounding communities choose our practice for its combination of clinical expertise, advanced diagnostics, and genuine commitment to getting patients back to the activities they love. Online scheduling, extended hours, and a streamlined new patient process make accessing care simple and efficient.
Insurance and Scheduling for Howell Township Patients
Balance Foot & Ankle accepts most major insurance plans including Blue Cross Blue Shield, Aetna, Priority Health, Cigna, United Healthcare, Medicare, and Medicaid for qualifying patients. Same-week appointments are typically available. Call (810) 588-0985 or schedule online at michiganfootdoctors.com to get started.
Dr. Tom's Product Recommendations

ASICS Gel-Kayano 30 Running Shoe
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Premium stability running shoe with gel cushioning in heel and forefoot — recommended for Howell Township runners with overpronation, plantar fasciitis, and heel pain requiring structured support.
Dr. Tom says: “My podiatrist recommended stability shoes for my plantar fasciitis — the Kayano made my Howell half-marathon training possible.”
Overpronators, plantar fasciitis sufferers, structured daily trainers
Neutral runners or patients who need maximum cushion over stability
Disclosure: We earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

Strassburg Sock Plantar Fasciitis Night Splint
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Comfortable sock-style night splint that maintains the plantar fascia in a stretched position overnight — highly effective for first-step morning heel pain in plantar fasciitis patients.
Dr. Tom says: “Eliminated my morning heel pain within two weeks of using this every night.”
Plantar fasciitis with severe morning pain, patients who cannot tolerate rigid night splints
Patients with Achilles tendon pathology where dorsiflexion positioning is contraindicated
Disclosure: We earn a commission at no extra cost to you.
✅ Pros / Benefits
- Howell office is directly accessible to Howell Township residents — no long-distance travel
- Full-spectrum care from pediatric sports injury to geriatric diabetic foot management
- In-office X-ray, ultrasound, and custom orthotics for efficient single-visit evaluation
- Most major insurance accepted including Medicare and Medicaid
❌ Cons / Risks
- Advanced surgical procedures for complex cases may be performed at Bloomfield Hills location
- High patient volume at peak times may extend wait times slightly beyond typical 5–7 days
Dr. Tom Biernacki’s Recommendation
Howell Township is home base for our Livingston County practice. I’ve treated multiple generations of families here — kids who played sports in Howell and now bring their own children in. That continuity of care means I know the patient, their history, and their goals. It’s the kind of relationship that leads to better outcomes and a more personal experience than you’d get at a larger urban practice.
— Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM | Board-Certified Podiatric Surgeon | Balance Foot & Ankle
Frequently Asked Questions
Where is Balance Foot & Ankle located for Howell Township patients?
Our Howell office is located in the city of Howell, directly accessible from Howell Township. The office is conveniently located near the center of Livingston County. Call (810) 588-0985 for the exact address and directions, or find us at michiganfootdoctors.com.
What is the most common foot problem treated in Howell Township?
Plantar fasciitis (heel pain) is the single most common condition we treat at our Howell location, followed by ingrown toenails, bunions, ankle sprains, and fungal nail infections. Sports injuries including Achilles tendinopathy and ankle sprains are particularly frequent among Howell’s active youth and adult athletic community.
Does Dr. Biernacki perform foot surgery in Howell?
Yes. Minor surgical procedures including ingrown toenail removal, wart excision, cyst removal, and nail matrix ablation are performed in-office at our Howell location. More complex surgical procedures including bunion correction, hammertoe repair, and bone work are performed at an outpatient surgical center. Call our office to discuss your specific surgical needs.
How do I get an appointment at Balance Foot & Ankle Howell?
Call (810) 588-0985 or visit michiganfootdoctors.com to schedule online. New patient appointments are typically available within 5–7 business days. Urgent cases — including suspected fractures, infections, or diabetic foot wounds — are accommodated within 24–48 hours. Extended hours are available for working patients from Howell Township.
Michigan Foot Pain? See Dr. Biernacki In Person
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When should I see a podiatrist?
If symptoms persist past 2 weeks, affect your normal activity, or are accompanied by red-flag symptoms (warmth, redness, swelling, inability to bear weight).
What does treatment cost?
Most diagnostic visits and conservative treatments are covered by Medicare and major insurers. Out-of-pocket costs vary by your specific plan.
How quickly can I get an appointment?
Most non-urgent cases see us within 5 business days. Urgent cases (sudden pain, possible fracture) typically same or next business day.
What is Foot pain?
Foot pain is a common foot/ankle condition that affects mobility and quality of life. Understanding the underlying cause is the first step in successful treatment. Our podiatrists at Balance Foot & Ankle perform a hands-on biomechanical exam, review your activity history, and use diagnostic imaging when appropriate to identify the root cause—not just treat the symptom. Many patients have been told to “rest and ice” without a deeper diagnostic workup; our approach is different.
Symptoms and warning signs
Common signs of foot pain include pain that worsens with activity, morning stiffness, swelling, tenderness when palpated, and difficulty bearing weight. If you experience sudden severe pain, inability to walk, visible deformity, numbness or color change, contact our office the same day or visit urgent care—these can signal a more serious injury such as a fracture, tendon rupture, or vascular compromise. Diabetics with any foot wound should seek same-day care.
Conservative treatment options
Most cases of foot pain respond to non-surgical care: structured rest, supportive footwear changes, custom orthotics, targeted stretching and strengthening protocols, anti-inflammatory medications when medically appropriate, and in-office procedures such as ultrasound-guided injections. We also offer advanced therapies including MLS laser therapy, EPAT/shockwave, regenerative injections, and image-guided procedures. Treatment is sequenced from least invasive to most invasive, and we explain the rationale at every step.
When is surgery considered?
Surgery is reserved for cases that fail 3-6 months of well-structured conservative care, when there is structural pathology (severe deformity, complete tear, advanced arthritis), or when imaging shows damage that will not heal without intervention. Our surgeons have performed 3,000+ foot and ankle procedures and prioritize minimally-invasive techniques whenever appropriate. We discuss recovery timelines, return-to-activity milestones, and realistic outcome expectations before any procedure is scheduled.
Recovery timeline and prevention
Recovery from foot pain varies based on severity and chosen treatment path. Conservative cases often improve within 4-8 weeks with consistent adherence to the protocol. Post-procedural recovery may range from a few days (in-office procedures) to several months (reconstructive surgery). Long-term prevention involves footwear assessment, activity modification, structured strengthening, and regular check-ins with your podiatrist if you have a history of recurrence. We provide written home-exercise plans and digital follow-up support.
In-Office Treatment at Balance Foot & Ankle
If home treatment isn’t providing relief for your foot issues, our podiatry team at Balance Foot & Ankle can help with same-day evaluations and advanced in-office care.
Frequently Asked Questions
When should I see a podiatrist?
See a podiatrist if: foot or ankle pain has lasted more than 2–4 weeks without improvement, you’re changing your gait to avoid pain, you have an open wound or sore that isn’t healing, you notice nail discoloration or thickening, you have diabetes and any foot concern, or pain is severe enough to wake you at night. Most foot conditions are easier and cheaper to treat early — what starts as a minor issue can become a surgical problem with months of delay.
What is the difference between a podiatrist and an orthopedic surgeon?
Podiatrists (DPM — Doctor of Podiatric Medicine) specialize exclusively in the foot, ankle, and lower leg. Orthopedic surgeons (MD/DO) have broader musculoskeletal training but variable foot/ankle subspecialization. For foot and ankle-specific problems, a podiatrist often has more focused training and experience. For injuries involving the leg above the ankle, complex pediatric cases, or multi-level reconstruction, orthopedic consultation may be appropriate. We frequently co-manage patients with orthopedic colleagues.
How do I know if my foot pain is serious?
Signs that warrant same-day or next-day evaluation: severe pain that appeared suddenly without clear cause, swelling, redness, and warmth that appeared suddenly (possible gout, infection, or Charcot fracture), an open wound that looks infected (redness spreading, pus, warmth), inability to bear weight, or any foot problem in a diabetic patient. Pain that’s been present for weeks and is stable is important but not an emergency — schedule within 1–2 weeks.
Can foot problems cause back and knee pain?
Yes — this is a kinetic chain effect. Abnormal foot mechanics (overpronation, supination, leg length discrepancy) cause compensatory changes in knee, hip, and lumbar alignment. Roughly 30% of patients presenting to our clinic with knee pain have a treatable foot-level biomechanical cause. Correcting foot mechanics with orthotics or appropriate footwear often provides significant knee and back relief. If you have chronic knee or back pain and haven’t had your foot mechanics evaluated, it’s worth a consult.
Are orthotics worth it?
For the right conditions, yes — custom orthotics are among the most cost-effective interventions in podiatry. They’re most effective for: plantar fasciitis, flat feet with secondary knee/back pain, leg length discrepancy, metatarsalgia, posterior tibial tendon dysfunction, and diabetic foot pressure management. Quality OTC orthotics ($35–60) resolve symptoms for 60% of patients with mild-to-moderate conditions. Custom orthotics are appropriate when OTC options have failed or when the biomechanical problem is complex. We cast custom orthotics in-office.
How do I choose the right running shoes?
Start with your foot type (flat, neutral, high arch) and running pattern (overpronator, neutral, supinator). Flat feet and overpronators do best in stability or motion-control shoes. Neutral feet do well in neutral-cushioned shoes. High arches need maximum cushioning with flexible soles. Always buy running shoes at the end of the day (foot swelling peaks then), get properly fitted by a specialist, and replace every 300–500 miles. If you’ve been injured repeatedly, a gait analysis can identify the mechanical flaw driving your injury pattern.
What is the difference between a sprain and a fracture?
A sprain is a ligament injury (the tissue connecting bones); a fracture is a break in the bone itself. Both can occur with the same trauma (ankle roll, fall). The old test — ‘if you can walk, it’s not broken’ — is wrong; many fractures are initially weight-bearable. Key differences: a fracture typically produces localized bone tenderness along the bone itself, while a sprain is tender over the ligament. X-ray is the standard to differentiate. High-grade sprains without proper treatment can be as disabling as fractures.
How do I prevent foot and ankle injuries?
The four most impactful prevention strategies: (1) Supportive, appropriately fitted footwear for your foot type and activity. (2) Gradual activity progression — the 10% rule (never increase weekly mileage or intensity by more than 10%). (3) Regular calf and ankle mobility work. (4) Strengthening the posterior tibial tendon, peroneals, and intrinsic foot muscles. Most overuse injuries are preventable; most acute injuries are not — but ankle sprain recurrence (60–70% without rehab) is prevented by balance and proprioception training.
Related Conditions
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Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM is a double board-certified podiatrist and foot & ankle surgeon 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 reached over one million views.