
You are in the right place. Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM, FACFAS — board-certified foot & ankle surgeon with 3,000+ surgeries — explains exactly what small fiber neuropathy in feet means and what actually works. Call (810) 206-1402 for a same-day appointment at our Howell or Bloomfield Hills office.
Quick answer: Small Fiber Neuropathy Feet is a common foot/ankle topic that affects many patients. The 2026 evidence-based approach combines proper diagnosis, conservative-first treatment, and escalation only when needed. We treat this regularly at our Howell and Bloomfield Hills practices. Call (810) 206-1402.

The most important clinical decision with Small Fiber Neuropathy Feet isn’t which treatment to start with — it’s identifying the correct subtype. That changes everything. Call (810) 206-1402.
What Makes Small Fiber Neuropathy Different?
Medically reviewed by Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM
Board-certified podiatric surgeon | Balance Foot & Ankle, Howell & Bloomfield Hills, MI
Last reviewed: May 2026
Peripheral neuropathy can affect large myelinated nerve fibers (responsible for vibration and position sense, tested by standard NCS/EMG) or small unmyelinated/thinly myelinated fibers (responsible for pain, temperature, and autonomic function). Small fiber neuropathy specifically affects the latter — which is why standard nerve conduction studies are typically NORMAL, leading to frequent underdiagnosis.
Small fibers (C-fibers and A-delta fibers) are the first to be affected by early diabetes, immune-mediated conditions, and some toxins — meaning SFN can be the earliest manifestation of systemic disease, present before large fiber involvement shows up on standard NCS.
The distribution is typically length-dependent (longest axons affected first): symptoms start in the feet and progress proximally — the classic stocking distribution.
Symptoms of Small Fiber Neuropathy in the Feet
Burning pain: described as burning, scalding, or hot-cold sensations in the feet — often worse at night. The feet may feel burning even when they are cool to touch.
Allodynia: non-painful stimuli cause pain — light touch, the weight of bedsheets, or even cold air causes burning or electric pain. This hypersensitivity distinguishes SFN from large-fiber neuropathy, which typically causes numbness rather than hypersensitivity.
Autonomic symptoms: SFN affects autonomic fibers causing dry or excessively sweaty feet, livedo reticularis (mottled skin), color changes, and temperature dysregulation in the feet.
Preservation of strength and proprioception: because large fibers are initially spared, patients maintain balance, strength, and deep tendon reflexes — another distinguishing feature.
Causes, Diagnosis, and Treatment
Causes: the most common are diabetes and pre-diabetes (impaired glucose tolerance), autoimmune conditions (Sjögren’s syndrome, lupus, sarcoidosis), genetic mutations (SCN9A and SCN10A sodium channel variants cause hereditary SFN), HIV, celiac disease, and heavy metal toxicity. A significant proportion (30–50%) are idiopathic.
Diagnosis: Skin punch biopsy measuring intraepidermal nerve fiber density (IENFD) is the gold standard — it directly counts small fibers in the skin. Reduced density confirms SFN. Autonomic testing (quantitative sudomotor axon reflex test, QSART) is an alternative.
Treatment: addressing the underlying cause is primary — glucose control in diabetes, immunotherapy for autoimmune SFN, gluten-free diet for celiac. Symptomatic treatment: duloxetine, gabapentin, pregabalin, and topical agents (lidocaine, capsaicin) reduce neuropathic pain. Emerging: intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) for autoimmune SFN.
Dr. Tom's Product Recommendations

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Dr. Tom says: “Topical cooling agents provide surface-level relief for the burning pain of small fiber neuropathy — applied directly to the affected area as needed for symptom management.”
Neuropathic burning feet, allodynia management, topical pain relief
Replacing prescription medications for severe SFN
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Allodynia, sock-related foot pain, minimal contact coverage
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✅ Pros / Benefits
- Identifying the underlying cause allows disease-specific treatment
- Autoimmune SFN responds to IVIG — can improve significantly
- Early diagnosis prevents progression to large-fiber involvement
- Multiple symptomatic medications available for pain management
❌ Cons / Risks
- Idiopathic SFN (30–50%) lacks a specific treatable cause
- Skin punch biopsy is not available at all centers
- Neuropathic pain medications are incompletely effective and have side effects
- Allodynia is particularly disabling — even bedsheets cause pain in severe cases
Dr. Tom Biernacki’s Recommendation
Small fiber neuropathy is one of the most underdiagnosed causes of burning feet. Patients often see multiple physicians and have normal nerve conduction studies before the correct diagnosis is made. I refer for skin punch biopsy in any patient with burning feet and hypersensitivity who has a normal NCS — because that’s the exact presentation of SFN. Getting the right diagnosis is essential: autoimmune SFN can be treated with IVIG and actually improve. Untreated, it progresses unnecessarily.
— Dr. Tom Biernacki, DPM | Board-Certified Podiatric Surgeon | Balance Foot & Ankle
Frequently Asked Questions
Can small fiber neuropathy be cured?
In treatable causes (autoimmune, celiac, glucose control), symptoms can be significantly reduced. Hereditary and idiopathic SFN cannot be cured but can be managed.
Is small fiber neuropathy the same as diabetic neuropathy?
Diabetes causes SFN as one of its earliest neuropathic manifestations, but SFN also has many non-diabetic causes.
Why does SFN cause burning rather than numbness?
Because small C-fibers carry pain signals. Loss of these fibers paradoxically causes pain and hypersensitivity (positive symptoms) rather than numbness (negative symptom of large fiber loss).
How is SFN different from fibromyalgia?
Both can cause widespread pain with normal standard testing. SFN has an objective diagnostic test (skin biopsy showing reduced nerve fiber density). The conditions can overlap but have distinct pathophysiology.
Get Expert Help at Balance Foot & Ankle
If this condition is affecting your daily activities or hasn’t improved with home treatment, schedule an evaluation with Dr. Tom Biernacki. We offer same-day appointments at our Howell and Bloomfield Hills locations and accept most insurance including Medicare. Most patients are walking comfortably within 4-6 weeks of starting our protocol — conservative care first, surgery only when needed.
Call (248) 337-5500 or request an appointment online. Our team responds within 1 business hour during clinic days.
⚕ Doctor Recommended
DASS Compression Socks
Graduated compression for circulation & comfort
Ready to fix this for good?
Reading goes only so far. The fastest path to relief is a 30-minute office visit with Dr. Biernacki — same-day Howell or Bloomfield Hills. Call (810) 206-1402 or use our online booking.
In-Office Treatment at Balance Foot & Ankle
If home treatment isn’t providing relief for your small fiber neuropathy feet, our podiatry team at Balance Foot & Ankle can help with same-day evaluations and advanced in-office care.
American Podiatric Medical Association: Neuropathy
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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.