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Sever’s Disease Near Auburn Hills, MI | Child Heel Pain DPM

Medically reviewed by Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM

Board-certified podiatric surgeon | Balance Foot & Ankle, Howell & Bloomfield Hills, MI
Last reviewed: May 2026

MICHIGAN PODIATRIST INSIGHT

Sever’s disease heel pain resolves completely with skeletal maturity — but the specific activity level that determines whether your child needs a walking boot versus just heel lifts is the variable most parents never think to discuss at the first visit. Call (810) 206-1402 — Balance Foot & Ankle serves Auburn Hills and all of Southeast Michigan.

Child playing soccer — pediatric heel pain (Sever's disease), Balance Foot & Ankle, Howell MI
Severs Disease Auburn Hills Mi treatment | Balance Foot & Ankle, Michigan

Medically Reviewed by: Dr. Tom Biernacki DPM · Board-Certified Podiatrist · Balance Foot & Ankle PLLC · Updated 2026

Sever’s Disease Near Auburn Hills, MI

Sever’s disease (calcaneal apophysitis) evaluation and treatment near Auburn Hills, MI is available at Balance Foot & Ankle in Bloomfield Hills. Dr. Biernacki DPM diagnoses this growth plate traction injury in active children 8-15 with the calcaneal squeeze test, manages it with Achilles stretching, heel cups, and activity modification, and reassures families that it is self-limited. Call (810) 206-1402.

The Most Common Cause of Heel Pain in Active Children

Sever’s disease — calcaneal apophysitis — is a traction apophysitis of the calcaneal growth plate caused by repetitive Achilles tendon stress during rapid bone growth in active children 8-15. It is the most common cause of heel pain in this age group, and nearly every youth sports family will encounter it. The mechanism: during growth spurts, the calcaneal bone grows faster than the Achilles tendon can lengthen, increasing traction on the growth plate. Every push-off during running applies this traction force, causing inflammation and pain. Clinical presentation in Auburn Hills-area children: heel pain in an athletic child aged 8-15 (peak: girls 8-10, boys 10-12), worsened by activity, improved with rest, bilateral in ~60% of cases. Calcaneal squeeze test: Compressing the heel from medial and lateral sides simultaneously reproduces the pain — pathognomonic for Sever’s. X-ray is used to rule out other pathology (fracture, bone tumor) rather than to diagnose Sever’s. The key reassurance: Sever’s disease is entirely self-limiting — it resolves completely when the calcaneal growth plate closes, typically by age 15. No long-term damage to the heel bone.

Key Takeaway: Sever’s disease = calcaneal apophysitis in active children 8-15. Calcaneal squeeze test = pathognomonic. Self-limited — resolves when growth plate closes (~age 15). Treatment: Achilles/gastrocnemius stretching, silicone heel cups, activity modification during flares. No long-term heel damage. Children can remain active with appropriate footwear and stretching.

Treatment: Stretching, Support, and Reassurance

Achilles and gastrocnemius stretching: Most effective intervention — wall stretches with knee straight (gastrocnemius) and bent (soleus) twice daily. Plantar fascia stretch each morning. Heel cups: Silicone gel heel cups cushion and slightly elevate the heel, reducing Achilles tension at the apophysis. OTC gel heel cups are effective; custom orthotics for children with flat feet or high arches. Activity modification: Reduce high-impact activity during flares. Cross-training with swimming or cycling maintains fitness while off-loading the heel. Boot immobilization: For severe cases with significant limp — walking boot 2-4 weeks, then gradual return with stretching. Footwear: Supportive athletic shoes with good heel cushioning; avoid flat shoes and bare feet on hard surfaces.

⚠️ See a Podiatrist If:

  • Child’s heel pain not improving with stretching and heel cups after 4-6 weeks
  • Heel pain so severe the child limps or won’t participate in sports
  • Heel pain in a child under 8 or over 15 — consider other diagnoses
  • Unilateral severe heel pain — rule out stress fracture or bone lesion
  • Night pain or rest pain in a child’s heel — red flag for bone pathology

OrthoInfo – AAOS: Sever’s Disease

Getting to Our Office From Auburn Hills

Our Bloomfield Hills office at 43494 Woodward Ave #208 is about 20 minutes from Auburn Hills via I-75 S to Woodward Ave. We accept most major insurance. Call (810) 206-1402 or book online.

Child With Heel Pain? Get a Sever’s Disease Evaluation

Balance Foot & Ankle · Serving Auburn Hills & Michigan

(810) 206-1402

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📋 Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM, FACFAS answers:

Sever’s disease (calcaneal apophysitis) is the most common cause of heel pain in children aged 8 to 14, and it is something we diagnose and treat frequently at our practice serving families from Auburn Hills and the surrounding area. The condition occurs because the Achilles tendon attaches to the calcaneal growth plate, and during periods of rapid growth the tendon is pulled taut across an apophysis that is still developing and vulnerable to traction stress. It is not a true disease and not a permanent injury — it resolves when the growth plate fuses, typically by age 15 to 16.

Treatment focuses on reducing the traction force the Achilles exerts on the growth plate and managing symptoms during the growth phase. Heel wedges or heel lifts placed inside cleats and athletic shoes raise the heel and reduce Achilles tension immediately and significantly. Calf stretching performed multiple times per day addresses the underlying tightness that drives the traction force. Activity modification — reducing high-impact sports during a flare but not eliminating all activity — allows the apophysis to calm down without deconditioned children losing months of sport participation unnecessarily. Most children improve meaningfully within 4 to 8 weeks of consistent treatment.

Balance Foot & Ankle surgeons are affiliated with Trinity Health Michigan, Corewell Health, and Henry Ford Health — three of Michigan’s largest health systems.