Plantar Fasciitis & Heel Pain

First-step morning heel pain — the commonest cause of heel pain in adults

Overview

Plantar fasciitis is a degenerative condition of the plantar fascia at its calcaneal insertion, characterised by collagen disorganisation and microtearing rather than true inflammation. It is the most common cause of heel pain in adults, accounting for over 1 million clinical visits annually. The condition particularly affects middle-aged individuals, runners, obese patients, and those who stand for prolonged periods. The hallmark is intense heel pain on the first few steps in the morning (post-static dyskinesia).


Symptoms & Causes

Common Symptoms

  1. Intense heel pain on first steps in the morning (worst in the first 5–10 steps)
  2. Pain that improves after walking but returns with prolonged standing
  3. Tenderness at the medial calcaneal tubercle (insertion point)
  4. Pain worse after rest following activity
  5. Tightness in the calf and Achilles tendon
  6. Pain walking barefoot on hard floors
  7. Radiating pain along the plantar arch in severe cases
Common Causes

  1. Obesity and excessive body weight loading
  2. Prolonged standing occupations (nurses, teachers, factory workers)
  3. Running — sudden increase in mileage or hard surfaces
  4. Tight gastrocnemius / soleus and short Achilles tendon
  5. Flat feet (pes planus) or high arches (pes cavus)
  6. Inappropriate footwear without arch support
  7. Calcaneal spur (bony prominence — associated but not causative)

Conservative & First-Line Treatment

  • Stretching — plantar fascia stretch and calf stretching protocol
  • Supportive footwear with arch support and cushioned heel
  • Custom orthotics or off-the-shelf heel cups
  • NSAIDs and topical diclofenac gel
  • Night splinting to maintain dorsiflexion stretch
  • Extracorporeal Shockwave Therapy (ESWT)

How Vedant Pain Management Clinic Can Help

Our interventional pain specialists offer the following evidence-based procedures, all performed with real-time ultrasound guidance for precision and safety:

  • Ultrasound-guided corticosteroid injection at the plantar fascia origin — precise placement avoiding fat pad atrophy
  • Ultrasound-guided PRP injection for chronic plantar fasciitis — promotes collagen regeneration, supports long-term healing
  • Ultrasound-guided plantar fascia fenestration (dry needling) for recalcitrant cases
  • Diagnostic musculoskeletal ultrasound to measure fascia thickness (>4 mm confirms pathology) and exclude plantar fascia tear
  • Tarsal tunnel syndrome exclusion via ultrasound and clinical assessment
  • Calcaneal nerve (medial / lateral plantar nerve) block for severe refractory pain

Newer Diagnostic Concepts & Advances

Chronic plantar fasciitis has been reclassified as 'plantar fasciopathy' to reflect the predominantly degenerative (non-inflammatory) histology. Furthermore, Baxter's nerve entrapment (inferior calcaneal nerve compression) is now recognised as a co-existing or mimicking condition in up to 15% of cases — identifiable with high-resolution ultrasound at Vedant Pain Clinic.

Frequently Asked Questions

The majority (80–90%) of plantar fasciitis cases resolve within 12 months with conservative management. However, this timeline can be significantly shortened with targeted interventional treatment, allowing faster return to activities and work.

Calcaneal spurs are present in about 50% of people with plantar fasciitis but also in 15–25% of people without heel pain. The spur itself is not the source of pain — the fascial degeneration at the insertion is. Treatment targets the fascia, not the spur.

Blind corticosteroid injection into the heel carries a risk of plantar fat pad atrophy, which can cause worse long-term pain. Ultrasound guidance ensures precise delivery into the fascial insertion, avoiding the fat pad, and confirms adequate medication spread.

Corticosteroids reduce short-term pain but do not repair the underlying tendon degeneration. PRP (Platelet Rich Plasma) contains growth factors (PDGF, TGF-β, VEGF) that stimulate collagen regeneration. Studies show PRP provides more durable pain relief at 6–12 months compared to steroids.

After a PRP injection, we typically recommend reduced weight-bearing for 48–72 hours and gradual return to activity over 4–6 weeks, with a structured physiotherapy programme. Return to running is usually possible at 6–8 weeks post-injection.
Meet Our Specialist

Dr. Mohit Gupta

Interventional Pain Physician & Pain Specialist

Dr. Mohit Gupta is a highly experienced Interventional Pain Physician dedicated to helping patients overcome chronic pain and regain a better quality of life. He combines advanced, minimally invasive pain management techniques with compassionate, personalized care.

10+ Years Experience
Advanced Pain Therapies
Patient-First Care
Dr Mohit Gupta