Plantar Fasciitis · Heel Pain · In-Home PT
Plantar Fasciitis Physical Therapy in Boca Raton: Why It Keeps Coming Back and How to Fix It
If your first steps out of bed in the morning feel like walking on broken glass in your heel, you likely have plantar fasciitis. It's one of the most common foot conditions I treat — and one of the most frequently undertreated. Most patients with plantar fasciitis have tried rest, stretching, orthotics, and cortisone shots before they reach me. Here's why those approaches often fail and what actually works.
What Is Plantar Fasciitis?
The plantar fascia is a thick band of connective tissue that runs along the bottom of the foot from the heel bone (calcaneus) to the base of the toes. It supports the arch of the foot and acts as a spring during walking and running, absorbing load and returning energy.
Plantar fasciitis (now more accurately called plantar fasciopathy) is a degenerative condition involving microtearing and failed healing at the origin of the fascia where it attaches to the heel. The word "fasciitis" implies inflammation, but recent research shows the primary pathology is degeneration — which is why anti-inflammatory treatments (ice, NSAIDs, cortisone) provide only temporary relief.
Classic symptom pattern: sharp heel pain with the first steps in the morning or after prolonged sitting, which partially eases after a few minutes of walking, then worsens again with extended weight-bearing. The morning pain is caused by the fascia contracting and shortening overnight — then being suddenly loaded with weight-bearing.
Why Common Treatments Fail
Most people try these before physical therapy:
- Rest: Reduces pain temporarily but doesn't stimulate tissue remodeling. When you return to activity, the same problem returns.
- Calf stretching: Useful as an adjunct but doesn't address the load tolerance of the fascia itself.
- Orthotics: Reduce stress on the fascia and can be helpful short-term, but become a crutch if used without rehabilitation. The foot still needs to become capable of tolerating load without support.
- Cortisone injections: Provide short-term pain relief but are associated with fascia weakening with repeated injections and poor long-term outcomes.
The evidence is now very clear: progressive loading of the plantar fascia and the calf/Achilles complex is the most effective treatment for plantar fasciitis. This requires a structured program, not passive treatments.
The Loading Protocol: What Actually Works
The centerpiece of effective plantar fasciitis treatment is heavy, slow resistance loading of the plantar fascia and its associated structures. Research shows this stimulates tendon and fascia remodeling far more effectively than rest or stretching alone.
Key exercises:
- Windlass mechanism loading: Exercises that load the fascia in its functionally elongated position (toes extended). Single-leg heel raises with the toes elevated on a step edge are particularly effective.
- Single-leg calf raises with loading: Progressive increase in load over 8–12 weeks. This is the cornerstone — most patients haven't done this properly or with sufficient load.
- Intrinsic foot muscle strengthening: Towel scrunches, short foot exercises, and toe spread work to rebuild the active arch support that offloads the fascia.
Timeline: Most patients see significant reduction in morning pain within 4–6 weeks. Full resolution typically takes 10–14 weeks. This is longer than patients expect — but it's the timeline for actual tissue remodeling, not just symptom suppression.
Common Questions
What aggravates plantar fasciitis?
Walking barefoot on hard floors, prolonged standing, hill walking, and high-impact activity. In the early phases, I prescribe specific load restrictions while the loading program takes effect.
Do I need custom orthotics?
Usually not. Over-the-counter arch support insoles are often sufficient as a short-term adjunct while the foot strengthening program progresses. Custom orthotics are occasionally appropriate for significant structural foot deformities.
What about night splints?
Night splints maintain the fascia in a slightly lengthened position overnight, reducing the morning first-step pain. They're a useful short-term tool but not a treatment in themselves.
Most physical therapy ends when the pain does. At Empower Fitness, I bridge the gap — taking you from injury all the way through recovery to full strength, function, and confidence. You come back better than before.
Ready to Get Started?
Free 20-minute consultation for patients in Boca Raton, Delray Beach, and Pompano Beach. No waiting rooms. I come to you.
Call: 954-901-7211 Contact for Availability →