Quote:
Originally Posted by Wuornos *Disclaimer: This is NOT Medical advice, only speculation*
1. Obviously, remove the shoe immediately at the first sign of numbness, tingling, "paraplegia". The numbness is likely caused by nerve compression.
2. You say the pain and numbness is only on the right (presumably- but not necessarily- your "dominant" foot). Barring preexisting circulatory or neurological conditions (arthritis, diabetes, etc.) it is likely caused by the shoe.
You could :
A. Try a different pair of 5 inch heels. It may be that particular shoe causing the problem.
B. Take off the right shoe at the first sign of paraplegia and leave the left on, to see if the same symptoms appear on the left (less dominant foot) over time.
C. Stretch and deeply massage both feet prior to putting on the heels.
D. Take breaks to massage and stretch your feet every hour or so.
E. Elevate your feet- above the level of your heart- at least ten minutes every hour or so.
This may help you "troubleshoot" the problem.
The most important thing is to remove the right shoe at the first sign of numbness or pain- it will NEVER "work itself out" by continuing to wear the shoe.
Best of luck to you.
Just an opinion... |
Thanks for such a load of useful informationWuornos!
Yeah I remove the shoe immediately as soon as the pain starts, and you're right on the spot, it is my dominant foot.
For further information, this started up when I went to a Torture Garden party in 5" shoes and wore them all night, at the end of the night I had this pain in the right foot and it pretty much stayed there for the next week or so, so I didn't use heels that time until it wore off.
I kinda have the hinch that it's nerve compression since this never happens to my left foot even if I leave the shoe on longer, even a full night without any problem.
This happens pretty much with all 5" pumps I have, it doesn't happen with boots though, maybe because I'm stressing the foot less in boots due to the ankle being firmly gripped.