Plantar Fasciitis

Plantar fasciitis is the most common cause of heel pain. The plantar fascia is the ligament that connects your heel bone to your toes. If you strain your plantar fascia, it gets irritated or inflamed. Then your heel or the bottom of your foot hurts when you stand or walk.

What causes it?

Plantar fasciitis is caused by straining the ligament that supports your arch. Repeated strain can cause tiny tears in the ligament. These can lead to inflammation along the bottom of the heel. This problem is more likely to happen if you walk, stand, or run for long periods of time, especially on hard surfaces.

What are the symptoms?

Most people with plantar fasciitis have pain along the bottom of their foot and heel. It's often worse when they take their first steps after they get out of bed or sit for a long time. Your foot may hurt more as the day goes on. It may hurt the most when you climb stairs.

How is it diagnosed?

To diagnose plantar fasciitis, your doctor will check your feet and watch you stand and walk. Your doctor will ask questions about your symptoms and your past health. Your doctor will also ask you where the pain is and at what time of day your foot hurts most.

How is plantar fasciitis treated?

No single treatment works best for everyone with plantar fasciitis. But there are things you can try to help your foot get better. For example, cut back on activities that make your foot hurt. Stretch your toes and calves several times a day. Put ice on your heel to reduce pain.

Health Tools

Health Tools

Health Tools help you make wise health decisions or take action to improve your health.

Decision Points focus on key medical care decisions that are important to many health problems. Actionsets are designed to help people take an active role in managing a health condition.

Cause

Plantar fasciitis is caused by straining the ligament ( plantar fascia ) that supports your arch. Repeated strain can cause tiny tears in the plantar fascia. These can lead to pain along the bottom of the foot and heel. This may be more likely to happen if:

Symptoms

The main symptom of plantar fasciitis is heel pain when you take your first steps after you get out of bed or after you sit for a long time. It gets better after a few steps but gets worse as the day goes on. You may also have:

Plantar fasciitis may be mistaken for other conditions with similar symptoms, such as a stress fracture or a nerve problem such as tarsal tunnel syndrome .

What Happens

What Happens

Plantar fasciitis most often occurs because of injuries that have happened over time. With treatment, you will have less pain within a few weeks. But it may take time for the pain to go away completely. It may take a few months to a year.

When to Call a Doctor

When to Call a Doctor

Call your doctor now if you have heel pain with fever, with redness or warmth in your heel, or with numbness or tingling in your heel.

Call your doctor if you have:

Call your doctor if you've been diagnosed with plantar fasciitis and the home treatment you agreed on is not helping to control your heel pain.

Watchful waiting

If you have heel pain:

Exams and Tests

Exams and Tests

To diagnose plantar fasciitis, your doctor will ask questions about:

If you are an athlete, your doctor may look for other problems. These may include issues with how your feet strike the ground, how your feet are shaped, or your training routine.

X-rays aren't helpful in diagnosing plantar fasciitis because they don't show ligaments clearly. But you might get X-rays if your doctor suspects a stress fracture , a bone spur, or some other foot or ankle bone problem.

Treatment Overview

Treatment Overview

No single treatment works best for everyone with plantar fasciitis. But there are many things you can try to help your foot get better.

If these treatments don't help, your doctor may recommend splints that you wear at night, shots of medicine (such as a steroid ) in your heel, surgery, or other treatments.

Learn more

Self-Care

There are many methods you can try to relieve the heel pain of plantar fasciitis. Different people find that one method or a combination of methods works best for them. Try the following methods.

The healing process takes time—from a few months to a year. But you should begin to have less pain within weeks of starting treatment. If you have not improved after trying these methods for 6 weeks, your doctor may suggest other treatments.

To be successful at treating plantar fasciitis, you will need to:

Stretching your plantar fascia before you get out of bed

Many people with plantar fasciitis have intense heel pain when they take their first steps after resting for a long time. This pain comes from the tightening of the plantar fascia that happens during sleep. Stretching or massaging your plantar fascia before you stand up can often reduce heel pain.

Stretching exercises should create a pulling feeling. But they shouldn't cause pain. Ask your physical therapist or doctor which exercises will work best for you.

Learn more

Current as of: July 17, 2023

Author: Ignite Healthwise, LLC Staff

Clinical Review Board
All Healthwise education is reviewed by a team that includes physicians, nurses, advanced practitioners, registered dieticians, and other healthcare professionals.

This information does not replace the advice of a doctor. Ignite Healthwise, LLC, disclaims any warranty or liability for your use of this information. Your use of this information means that you agree to the Terms of Use . Learn how we develop our content .

To learn more about Ignite Healthwise, LLC, visit webmdignite.com .

© 2024 Ignite Healthwise, LLC. Healthwise, Healthwise for every health decision, and the Healthwise logo are trademarks of Ignite Healthwise, LLC.

Related Links

Achilles Tendon Problems Toe, Foot, and Ankle Problems, Noninjury

Page Footer

I want to.

Get an ID card File a claim View my claims and EOBs Check coverage under my plan See prescription drug list Find an in-network doctor, dentist, or facility Find a form Find 1095-B tax form information View the Cigna Glossary Contact Cigna

Audiences

Individuals and Families Medicare Employers Brokers Providers

Secure Member Sites

myCigna member portal Health Care Provider portal Cigna for Employers Client Resource Portal Cigna for Brokers

The Cigna Group Information

About Cigna Healthcare Company Profile Careers Newsroom Investors Suppliers The Cigna Group Third Party Administrators International Evernorth

Cigna. All rights reserved.

Privacy Legal Product Disclosures Cigna Company Names Customer Rights Accessibility Non-Discrimination Notice Language Assistance [PDF] Report Fraud Sitemap Cookie Settings Cookie Update

Disclaimer

Individual and family medical and dental insurance plans are insured by Cigna Health and Life Insurance Company (CHLIC), Cigna HealthCare of Arizona, Inc., Cigna HealthCare of Illinois, Inc., Cigna HealthCare of Georgia, Inc., Cigna HealthCare of North Carolina, Inc., Cigna HealthCare of South Carolina, Inc., and Cigna HealthCare of Texas, Inc. Group health insurance and health benefit plans are insured or administered by CHLIC, Connecticut General Life Insurance Company (CGLIC), or their affiliates (see a listing of the legal entities that insure or administer group HMO, dental HMO, and other products or services in your state). Accidental Injury, Critical Illness, and Hospital Care plans or insurance policies are distributed exclusively by or through operating subsidiaries of Cigna Corporation, are administered by Cigna Health and Life Insurance Company, and are insured by either (i) Cigna Health and Life Insurance Company (Bloomfield, CT); (ii) Life Insurance Company of North America (“LINA”) (Philadelphia, PA); or (iii) New York Life Group Insurance Company of NY (“NYLGICNY”) (New York, NY), formerly known as Cigna Life Insurance Company of New York. The Cigna name, logo, and other Cigna marks are owned by Cigna Intellectual Property, Inc. LINA and NYLGICNY are not affiliates of Cigna.

All insurance policies and group benefit plans contain exclusions and limitations. For availability, costs and complete details of coverage, contact a licensed agent or Cigna sales representative. This website is not intended for residents of New Mexico.

Selecting these links will take you away from Cigna.com to another website, which may be a non-Cigna website. Cigna may not control the content or links of non-Cigna websites. Details