Plantar fasciitis is debilitating. When you step out of bed, it feels like stepping on a bed of nails. It improves a bit as you walk around, but later in the day, the pain intensifies across the bottoms of your feet where your arches run and even travels into your heels. You'll probably Google "plantar fasciitis treatment." But what you'll find just temporarily relieves the pain and doesn't fix the problem.
When you start dreading leg days, it gets annoying. When you start skipping lifts altogether, then you know it's gone from annoying to injury.
The first mistake is grinding through the pain until you create other issues at the knees, hips, or low back due to compensatory form changes. This sucks because now you have multiple issues above the foot, in addition to your burning plantar fasciitis.
The second mistake is to follow the advice from many doctors or rehab clinicians suggesting to roll your arches with a lacrosse ball, ice it, and stretch it. If you've followed this advice, then you're probably already laughing or getting pissed. You know that approach will help you to feel better for a few days, but as soon as you try to get back to your heavy lifts or spend a lot of time on your feet, the pain comes back with a vengeance.
The problem with this passive treatment approach? You've done nothing to change tissue quality or the tolerance and capacity of the tissue. Who cares if lacrosse balls, ice, and stretching make it feel good temporarily if you're back to ground zero every time you go for a long walk or try to squat again.
There's a better way to get your plantar fasciitis under control and keep it from coming back. First, let's understand what we're dealing with.
Let's clear up some confusion. It's widely assumed that plantar fasciitis (or fasciopathy) is simply inflammation of the plantar fascia. But more accurately, it's in part a result of chronic breakdown or degeneration of collagen cells within the plantar fascia tissue.
It's not an "itis" or acute inflammatory issue that's causing the problems. It's more related to collagen tissue gone bad over time in the plantar fascia.
First, stop pushing yourself into new injuries up the chain due to compensations. You can't ignore a flared case of plantar fasciitis.
Also, beware of treatment plans that only include passive strategies such as rest, stretching, ice, lacrosse ball rolling, or getting a cortisone shot. This approach will only mask or temporarily relieve the pain, but it won't provide a lasting fix.
Fixing your plantar fasciitis once and for all requires taking a more active approach. You have to strengthen your plantar fascia, Achilles, and calves to finally get back to your big lifts (1, 2).
Here are five key strengthening exercises you need. They'll help you get rid of nagging injuries, including plantar fasciitis, Achilles tendinitis, and calf strains. If you have problems like these, it'll limit your ability to do squats, deadlifts, lunges, step-ups, or any heavy carry variation.
If you can tolerate your bigger lifts without compromising or compensating form, use these exercises as warm-ups, on off-days, or in between sets of bigger lifts.
Begin by adding the exercises to your workout in place of any lifts that you've had to stop doing due to pain. Between 2-4 weeks later, shift these exercises to your warm-ups. Keeping these in your warm-up or adding them as an active recovery mini-workout will maintain the progress they help you make.
I recommend incorporating ankle mobility exercises and comprehensive ankle strengthening, as well as glute and hip strengthening exercises to round out your approach to addressing plantar fasciitis.
Working through some discomfort is appropriate, but avoid pushing past a 5 out of 10 discomfort level while doing the exercises.
Note: This is not medical advice.
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