Time to prepare
First, use the
intervening time to prepare the patient to tolerate corrective orthotic
support. Have your patient use a golf ball to relax tight and tender muscles
and loosen up the stiff connective tissue, in preparation for wearing custom
shoe inserts. The procedure is easy, takes little time, and helps patients
get 'in touch' with their feet and lower extremities. Here's how:
Golf ball exercise.
Sit in a chair with a golf ball under your bare foot. Roll the ball in a
circular motion with your foot, using as much pressure as is comfortable.
Roll it from the front of your foot to the back, and along the arches and
outer edges. In the morning spend up to five minutes per foot doing this
procedure, and repeat in the evening.
Second, have the
patient work on strengthening any weak muscles in the feet or ankles prior
to beginning to use the orthotics. The basics are easy:
Towel scrunch.
Instruct your patient to sit on a chair and place a towel or other cloth
flat on the floor. The patient then 'scrunches' the towel up with his/her
toes. This exercise should be performed for six repetitions, and at least
once each day. Advise the patient to do this only on a wood or linoleum
floor, since a carpet will provide too much resistance.
Resistance
exercises. Provide your patient
with elastic, surgical‑grade rubber tubing and instructions for correct
performance of exercises for any weak or poorly coordinated muscle groups
around the foot and ankle. Check to see whether the company making your
patients' orthotics can also provide this exercise product. I have found
that the most commonly useful exercises are Tibialis Posterior and Inversion
and Eversion.
Foot taping
procedures
And finally, when a
patient really needs the support for the arches that the orthotics will
provide, a simple taping procedure is an excellent temporary source of foot
support. There are two basic techniques which have withstood the test of
time and have helped thousands of patients over the years:
Figure eight taping.
This is the easiest taping technique for providing temporary support for the
arches of the foot. [1] Athletic tape (1.5‑2 inches wide) is applied to the
lateral side of the leg two or three inches above the lateral malleolus and
brought across the dorsum of the foot to the medial arch.
Next, the tape is
brought across the bottom of the foot, supporting the cuboid. Without
drawing the tape tight, it is brought across the dorsum of the foot to the
medial tibia at the level of the starting point. Apply two to four more
strips for additional support, especially with heavier patients. Anchor
strips around the lower leg will help to keep the tape in place.
LowDye taping.
This taping procedure is particularly useful for providing support for an
athlete's strained arch, or for temporary relief of an acute plantar
fascitis condition.[2] Athletic tape (1 inch wide) is applied to the lateral
border of the foot, starting just proximal to the fifth metatarsal head.
This tape is brought
around the heel and lightly applied just proximal to the first metatarsal
head. The first metatarsal head is then depressed in a plantar direction,
taking care not to pronate the foot. Secure the tape at the first metatarsal
head while it is in this position. Repeat with three or four more strips of
tape. Finally, tie these strips down with circumferential strips running
under the arch from the dorsolateral to the dorsomedial aspect of the foot.
Doctors who truly care
for their patients will make sure that the time spent waiting for the return
of the custom orthotics is not wasted. The above techniques are very useful,
and should be considered in those patients who would benefit from support of
the feet and ankles. Patients really appreciate it when their doctor goes
the extra mile to ensure their comfort, and these procedures will help make
the transition to the orthotics easier and smoother.
References
1. Greenawalt MH.
Spinal Pelvic "Stabilization" (4th ed.). Roanoke: Foot Levelers, 1990:30‑31.
2. Roy S, Irvin R.
"Sports Medicine: Prevention, Evaluation, Management, and Rehabilitation."
Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice‑Hall, 1983:58.