Joint Mobility Restoration
JOINT FUNCTION & MOBILITY
Joint mobility problems can make the foot or ankle feel stiff, painful, unstable, or difficult to move through normal activity. Evaluation helps identify whether symptoms are related to arthritis, injury, tendon imbalance, scar tissue, deformity, or another structural problem.
- Stiffness or limited motion
- Pain with walking or activity
- Swelling or joint irritation
- Care depends on cause and severity
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
On this page
Quick Summary
Key takeaway: Joint mobility restoration focuses on identifying why a foot or ankle joint is stiff, painful, or limited, then matching care to the underlying cause.
Evaluation may include movement testing, gait review, imaging, footwear assessment, and treatment planning to improve comfort, function, and long-term joint support when appropriate.
Overview
What is Joint Mobility Restoration?
Joint mobility restoration refers to care aimed at improving movement, comfort, and function in a stiff or painful foot or ankle joint. The right approach depends on whether limited motion is caused by arthritis, injury, deformity, tendon problems, or soft-tissue tightness.
Why Evaluation Matters
Stiffness can come from very different problems, and treatment is not the same for every joint. Evaluation helps determine whether conservative care, orthotics, rehabilitation, injections, or surgical discussion may be appropriate.
Symptoms
Joint mobility problems may build gradually or follow an injury. Symptoms often affect walking, balance, footwear comfort, and the ability to return to normal activity.
Limited Range of Motion
The joint may feel stiff, locked, tight, or difficult to move through a normal walking pattern.
Pain With Activity
Pain may worsen with standing, walking, stairs, uneven ground, or higher-impact activity.
Swelling or Joint Irritation
The area may become swollen, tender, warm, or irritated after use or prolonged activity.
Changes in Walking Mechanics
Limited joint motion can cause limping, compensation, pressure changes, or discomfort in nearby joints.
Seek care now if…
Seek prompt evaluation if joint pain follows an injury, swelling is worsening, you cannot bear weight, the joint looks deformed, or stiffness is rapidly limiting normal movement.
Causes & Risk Factors
Reduced joint mobility can develop from structural changes, injury, inflammation, abnormal mechanics, or soft-tissue restriction around the foot or ankle.
Common Causes
- Arthritis or joint wear
- Prior injury or fracture
- Scar tissue or stiffness
- Tendon imbalance or tightness
- Foot or ankle deformity
The underlying cause determines whether treatment should focus on support, strengthening, inflammation control, mechanical correction, or surgical planning.
Risk Factors
- Prior sprains or trauma
- Foot or ankle arthritis
- Repetitive stress
- Flatfoot or high-arch mechanics
- Poor footwear support
- Previous surgery or immobilization
- Diabetes or neuropathy
- Long-standing deformity
Diagnosis
Diagnosis focuses on identifying which joint is limited, why motion is restricted, and whether surrounding structures are contributing to pain or compensation.
Typical Evaluation
- Symptom and activity review
- Range-of-motion testing
- Gait and alignment check
- Footwear and pressure review
- X-rays or imaging when needed
What to Bring
- Current shoes or inserts
- Prior imaging or reports
- History of injury or surgery
- Activity goals
- List of treatments tried
Treatment Options
Treatment depends on the cause of stiffness, the joint involved, symptom severity, activity goals, and whether the problem is flexible, inflamed, arthritic, or structurally fixed.
Related care: Treatment planning may include footwear changes, custom orthotics, rehabilitation, injections, bracing, or surgical discussion when joint restriction is severe or persistent.
Conservative Care
- Activity modification
- Anti-inflammatory strategies
- Supportive footwear
- Stretching guidance
Footwear / Orthotics
- Custom orthotics
- Pressure redistribution
- Shoe fit review
- Joint support
Surgery Consideration
- Fixed stiffness
- Severe joint damage
- Failed conservative care
- Structural correction
Recovery & Follow-Up
- Progress monitoring
- Mobility goals
- Footwear adjustments
- Long-term support
Recovery
Recovery depends on the cause of limited motion, how long symptoms have been present, and which treatment approach is used. Some patients improve with support, stretching, strengthening, and footwear changes, while others may need more targeted care.
What Helps Most
- Consistent support: Wear recommended shoes, braces, or orthotics as directed.
- Guided mobility work: Stretching and strengthening may improve function.
- Activity pacing: Avoid sudden overload while symptoms calm down.
- Pressure control: Reduce irritation from poor footwear or alignment.
- Follow-up care: Recheck persistent stiffness or worsening pain.
When to Follow Up
- Motion is decreasing: The joint is getting stiffer over time.
- Pain is worsening: Symptoms interfere with walking or daily activity.
- Swelling persists: Irritation does not improve with support.
- Compensation develops: Other joints or areas start hurting.
- Conservative care is not enough: Symptoms persist despite footwear, orthotics, or rehab.
Frequently Asked Questions
It means evaluating why a foot or ankle joint is stiff or painful, then choosing care that may improve motion, support, comfort, or function.
Common causes include arthritis, prior injury, scar tissue, deformity, tendon imbalance, inflammation, or long-standing abnormal mechanics.
Orthotics may help when stiffness or pain is related to poor mechanics, pressure, or alignment. They are not the right answer for every cause, so evaluation matters.
Imaging may be recommended when symptoms follow injury, arthritis is suspected, joint damage needs to be assessed, or symptoms are not improving with initial care.
No. Many patients start with conservative care such as footwear changes, orthotics, activity modification, stretching, or rehabilitation. Surgery is considered only when symptoms and structure justify it.
You should seek evaluation if stiffness is worsening, pain limits walking, swelling persists, or you are changing how you walk to avoid discomfort.
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