Family Foot and Ankle Clinic

Family Foot and Ankle Clinic

North Versailles: 412-824-9370
Delmont: 724-733-3338
Fax. 412-824-9371
Email Us Here
  • About
    • What is a Podiatrist?
    • Reviews
  • Contact
    • Directions
    • Request An Appointment
  • Shoes
    • General Tips
    • Anatomy Of A Shoe
    • What To Look For
    • Your Footprint
    • Wear Patterns
    • Diabetic Shoe Program
    • Specific Types of Shoes
      • General Athletic Shoes
      • Children’s Shoes
      • Men’s Shoes
      • Women’s Shoes
      • Aerobic Shoes
      • Baseball Shoes
      • Basketball Shoes
      • Cycling Shoes
      • Golf Shoes
      • Jogging/Running Shoes
      • Soccer Shoes
      • Tennis Shoes
      • Walking Shoes
      • Winter Sports
      • Work Footwear
      • Corrective Shoes
  • Foot Problems
    • General Statistics
    • Achilles Problems
    • Ankle Problems
    • Arch and Ball Problems
    • Common Foot Injuries
    • Deformities
    • Diabetes and your feet
    • Diseases of the foot
    • Heel Problems
    • Nail Problems
    • Pain Management
    • Skin Problems
    • Toe Problems
    • Vascular/Nerve Problems
  • Foot Care
    • General Tips
    • Athletic Foot Care
    • Blisters
    • Bunion Prevention
    • Burning Feet
    • Children’s Feet
    • Corns and Calluses
    • Diabetic Foot Care
    • Foot Care For Seniors
    • Fungus Problems
    • Ingrown Nails
    • Nutrition For Your Feet
    • Foot Odor and Smelly Feet
    • Pedicures
    • Self-exam
    • Women’s Feet
    • Your Feet at Work
  • Request Appointment
  • Patient Registration
  • Blog
You are here: Home / Your Footprint

Your Footprint

What Your Footprint Says About Your Feet

When you take a step, your foot typically hits the ground heel first and rolls toward your toes, flattening the arch slightly. As you push off the ball of your foot, your arch springs back and does not touch the ground. That’s how normal feet are supposed to work. Unfortunately, many feet aren’t normal.

Over-pronation occurs if your foot rolls too much toward the inside. This can cause arch strain and pain on the inside of the knee. Under-pronation occurs if your foot rolls too much to the outside; under-pronation can often lead to ankle sprains and stress fractures. You can relieve foot pain by compensating for these tendencies, but first you need to determine which way your feet roll.

One method for determining which kind of pronation you have is the watermark test: Put your feet into a bucket of water, then make footprints on a piece of dark paper. If your footprint looks like an oblong pancake with toes, you pronate excessively or have flat feet. Try molded-leather arch supports, which can be purchased in many drug stores. And when shopping for athletic shoes, ask a sales clerk for styles with “control” features – soles designed to halt that rolling-in motion. If arch supports or sports shoes don’t help, contact our office about custom-molded orthotic shoe inserts.

If there’s little or no connection in your footprint between the front part of the foot and the heel, you under-pronate or have a high arch. This means a lot of your weight is landing on the outside edge of your foot. Ask for “stability” athletic shoes, which are built with extra cushioning to remedy this problem. And if you are prone to ankle sprains, wear high-top athletic shoes that cover the foot and ankle snugly to minimize damage from twists.

Locations:

Family Foot & Ankle Clinic
1116 Lincoln Highway
North Versailles, PA 15137
412-824-9370
412-824-9371 (Fax)
Email Us Here

North Versailles Office Hours:
Monday 9:00am – 5:00pm
Tuesday 1:00pm – 6:30pm
Wednesday 9:00am – 12:00pm
Thursday 1:00pm – 5:00pm
Friday 9:00am – 5:00pm

We're also located at:
6530 US 22
Delmont, PA 15626
724-733-3338
Email Us Here

Delmont Office Hours:
Tuesday - 8:00am – 12:00pm
Thursday 8:00am – 12:00pm

Copyright © 2023 · Family Foot and Ankle Clinic - Developed By: Frye Media + Infusion Video