ANSWERS: 5
  • Walk on your hands.
  • soak your feet in a hot ebsum salt bath. it always worked for me
  • Oh boy... did they use the word "neuroma"? I just cringed. If they did, you have NO choice but to see a specialist. If that specialist, for whatever reason, cannot narrow it down, you need to see another specialist. I do not know why they are unable to properly diagnose if they know that you have a neuroma. On CAT scan or MRI the involved nerve is readily apparent if it is anything like the friends I have that have had them. It is an inflamed nerve. I know two people who had neuromas on their feet. One had the neuroma on the end of her big toe, the other has it between her metatarsals and is in treatment currently. One of them had to have a concoction to kill the nerve injected INTO the nerve. Surprisingly this did not hurt overly much. She has already had one treatment and the only thing that troubles her is part of her foot is numb. She is going to need a few more injections and have to wear orthopedic shoes. The other had to have surgery and is, to this day, untroubled and has gone on with her life fully normally. Neither of the two of them were able to find anything they could do at home to stop the pain. Eventually one of them could not have any water running over the toe. The other was nearly that bad. If you actually have a neuroma, you have no choice but to see a specialist. It is not going to get better... it is going to get worse.
  • Try going to see a masseuse and tell them where your feet hurt or show them. There are nerves all throughout your body that can affect your feet. I had muscle loss in my hand, (I just couldn't control it, it felt like it was asleep,) and went to a masseuse friend of mine and it turned out to be a pinched nerve in my back that he reset, and I was good as new.
  • Wooden legs would take care of the problem

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