Charcot Deformity
FOOT STRUCTURE & LIMB PROTECTION
Charcot deformity is a serious foot and ankle condition that can occur when nerve damage reduces protective sensation. Bones and joints may weaken, shift, or collapse over time, creating swelling, shape change, pressure areas, wounds, or instability that need careful evaluation.
- Foot shape or arch may change
- Swelling, warmth, or instability
- Higher risk with neuropathy or diabetes
- Early evaluation protects limb function
Evaluation & Next Steps
- Clear severity assessment and next steps
- Supportive care and recovery guidance
- Care across 4 Las Vegas locations
Call: (702) 703-4340
Hours: Mon–Fri: 8am–5pm
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Quick Summary
Key takeaway: Charcot deformity can change the shape and stability of the foot, especially when neuropathy reduces pain sensation. Early recognition and protection are important because continued walking on an unstable foot can worsen deformity and wound risk.
Evaluation usually focuses on foot structure, skin pressure, wound risk, nerve sensation, imaging findings, footwear needs, and whether bracing, custom support, wound care, or surgical discussion may be appropriate.
Overview
What is Charcot Deformity?
Charcot deformity develops when bones and joints in the foot or ankle weaken and shift, often after repeated stress on a foot with reduced sensation. The arch may flatten, the foot may widen, or pressure points may develop.
Why Evaluation Matters
Charcot changes can progress if the foot is not protected. Evaluation helps determine whether the foot is active, stable, at risk for wounds, or in need of bracing, custom footwear, imaging follow-up, or surgical planning.
Symptoms
Symptoms may be subtle because neuropathy can reduce pain. Swelling, warmth, redness, shape change, or new pressure areas should be taken seriously, especially in patients with diabetes or reduced sensation.
Swelling or Warmth
The foot or ankle may appear swollen, warm, or red, sometimes without severe pain.
Foot Shape Change
The arch may flatten, the foot may widen, or the ankle may look less stable over time.
Pressure Areas or Calluses
New rubbing, calluses, blisters, or skin breakdown may appear where the foot shape has changed.
Instability With Walking
The foot may feel weak, unstable, or difficult to fit into shoes or braces.
Seek care now if…
Seek prompt evaluation if the foot becomes suddenly swollen, warm, red, unstable, changes shape, develops a wound, or becomes difficult to bear weight on, especially if you have diabetes or neuropathy.
Causes & Risk Factors
Charcot deformity is most often linked to neuropathy, where reduced sensation allows repeated stress or injury to go unnoticed. Over time, bones and joints can weaken, shift, or collapse.
Common Causes
- Diabetic neuropathy
- Reduced protective sensation
- Repeated stress or minor injury
- Joint weakening or collapse
Because pain may be limited, the foot can continue to bear weight while bones and joints are inflamed or unstable.
Risk Factors
- Diabetes
- Peripheral neuropathy
- Prior foot injury
- Foot ulcers or pressure points
- Poorly fitting shoes
- Limited mobility
- Previous Charcot changes
Diagnosis
Diagnosis focuses on identifying active Charcot changes, foot stability, wound risk, sensation, alignment, and whether bones or joints have shifted. Imaging is often important when Charcot deformity is suspected.
Typical Evaluation
- Foot and ankle exam
- Skin and wound check
- Sensation testing
- Weight-bearing X-rays
- Advanced imaging when needed
What to Bring
- Diabetes history
- Current shoes or braces
- Prior foot imaging
- Wound or ulcer history
- Medication list
Treatment Options
Treatment depends on whether Charcot changes are active or stable, whether wounds are present, how much deformity has developed, and whether the foot can be protected with bracing, custom footwear, wound care, or surgery.
Related care: Treatment planning may include custom bracing, offloading, wound protection, diabetic foot care, imaging follow-up, or surgical discussion when deformity threatens skin, stability, or limb function.
Conservative Care
- Offloading pressure
- Activity modification
- Wound prevention
- Inflammation monitoring
Footwear / Orthotics
- Custom shoes
- Charcot bracing
- Pressure relief
- Skin protection
Surgery Consideration
- Severe deformity
- Recurrent wounds
- Unstable joints
- Limb-risk concerns
Recovery & Follow-Up
- Repeat imaging
- Brace checks
- Skin monitoring
- Long-term protection
Recovery
Recovery and long-term management depend on whether the deformity is active, stable, braced, or associated with wounds. Protection, pressure relief, and close follow-up are often central to reducing recurrence and skin breakdown risk.
What Helps Most
- Foot protection: Limit pressure during active changes.
- Custom support: Use prescribed shoes, inserts, or braces.
- Skin checks: Watch for redness, calluses, blisters, or wounds.
- Diabetes control: Good blood sugar control supports healing.
- Follow-up imaging: Repeat imaging may track stability.
When to Follow Up
- New warmth or swelling: Active change may be developing.
- Foot shape changes: Alignment or arch collapse is worsening.
- Skin breakdown: Any blister, sore, or ulcer needs attention.
- Brace problems: Rubbing or poor fit can create pressure.
- Walking feels unstable: Support may need adjustment.
Frequently Asked Questions
Charcot deformity is a change in foot or ankle structure that can occur when nerve damage reduces protective sensation and allows bones or joints to weaken, shift, or collapse.
It can change foot shape, increase pressure points, and raise the risk of wounds, infection, instability, and limb-threatening complications if not protected and monitored.
No. Many patients have neuropathy, so pain may be mild or absent even when swelling, warmth, redness, or bone and joint changes are present.
Diagnosis may include a foot and ankle exam, skin and wound assessment, sensation testing, X-rays, and advanced imaging when needed.
Some cases are managed with offloading, bracing, custom shoes, wound prevention, and close follow-up. Surgery may be considered when deformity is severe, unstable, or causing recurrent wounds.
Seek evaluation if the foot becomes warm, swollen, red, unstable, changes shape, or develops a wound, especially if you have diabetes or neuropathy.
Locations
LVVIS West Side Consultation Office
8930 W Sunset Rd, Suite 350
Las Vegas, NV 89148
Consultations and vascular evaluations
LV2 Limb & Vascular Division
8930 W Sunset Rd, Suite 350
Las Vegas, NV 89148
Limb preservation and podiatry partnership care
LVVIS East Procedure Office
2250 E Flamingo Rd, Suite 100
Las Vegas, NV 89119
Procedures, diagnostics, and circulatory care
LVVIS West Side Surgical Center
6120 S Fort Apache Rd, Suite 100
Las Vegas, NV 89148
Advanced vascular and interventional procedures