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Old 02-28-07, 06:34 PM   #1 (permalink)
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8/1/2006
Start Date:
185 lb
Start Weight:
152 lb
Current Weight:
155 lb
Goal Weight:
-33 lb
Weight Loss:
5/1/2007
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Local doctor sees trend of childhood obesity, foot pain

Local doctor sees trend of childhood obesity, foot pain

Robert M Przynosch, DPM, FACFAS, a member of the American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons (ACFAS), says he's noticing more and more overweight and obese children with foot and ankle pain in his examining room, mirroring a national epidemic of childhood obesity.
An estimated 16 percet of U.S. children ages six to 19 are overweight, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Poor diet, lack of exercise and genetics can play a role. A "vicious cycle" of foot pain and obesity traps some children.
"You want overweight children to exercise and lose weight, but beacause of their weight, their feet hurt and they can't exercise," says Przynosch, a foot and ankle surgeon in western North Carolina.
The foot is a complex structure consisting of 26 bones, 33 joints, and more than 100 muscles, tendons and ligaments. Last Novemner, researchers in Britain reported "alarming new evidence that childhood obesity changes foot structure and results in instability when walking." Being overweight flattens the foot, straining the plantar fascia, a band of tissue which runs from the heel to the base of the toes, causing heel pain.
Because the heel bone is not fully developed until age 14 or older, overweight children are more prone to Sever's disease. Although not an actual disease, it involves an inflammation of the heel's growth plate due to muscle strain and repetitive stress. Walking makes the pain worse. Being overweight may also cause stress fractures, or hairline fractures (breaks) in a child's heel bone.
According to the ACFAS Website FootPhysicians.com, some overweight children suffer foot pain from congenital or inherited foot conditions, such as bunions, hammertoes, pediatric flatfoot and tarsal coalition, an abnormal connection between two or more bones in the back of the foot. Children with these deformities may be less active because of pain. Sometimes a child will complain of calf or ache pain. This results from a flatfoot that is flexible. The collapsing of the arch can require more energy, making it more difficult for a child to walk and run.
Foot and ankle surgeons treat many overweight children with custom orthotic devices (shoe inserts), physical therapy and other conservative measures to reduce or eliminate pain. But treating painful feet and ankles is only part of the childhood weight loss equation.
"As foot nd ankle surgeons, we can reduce the aches and pains so these children can run around and play like all the other kids, but parents need to take responsibility for watching their children's lifestyles and diets,"says Przynosch.

Childhood Obesity
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