Arthritis

JOINT PAIN & MOBILITY

Arthritis can affect the foot and ankle joints, causing pain, stiffness, swelling, and reduced mobility. Symptoms may build gradually or worsen after injury, overuse, or long-standing joint wear.

Evaluation & Next Steps

Call: (702) 703-4340
Hours: Mon–Fri: 8am–5pm

Quick Summary

Key takeaway: Arthritis in the foot or ankle can make walking, standing, and daily movement harder over time. Evaluation helps identify the affected joint, severity, and whether conservative care or surgical planning may be appropriate.

Treatment planning usually focuses on pain control, mobility, joint support, footwear or orthotic changes, imaging findings, and when more advanced options should be discussed.

Overview

What is Arthritis?

Arthritis is inflammation or degeneration within a joint. In the foot and ankle, it may affect cartilage, joint surfaces, alignment, and surrounding soft tissues, leading to pain and stiffness during movement.

Why Evaluation Matters

Joint pain can come from arthritis, injury, tendon problems, alignment changes, or other conditions. Evaluation helps confirm the source of symptoms and guides treatment before mobility becomes more limited.

Symptoms

Arthritis symptoms vary by joint, severity, activity level, and whether inflammation or structural wear is present. Symptoms may come and go or gradually become more persistent.

Joint Pain

Aching, soreness, or sharp pain may occur during walking, standing, stairs, or activity.

Stiffness or Limited Motion

The joint may feel tight, hard to bend, or less flexible after rest or activity.

Swelling or Tenderness

Inflammation may cause warmth, puffiness, tenderness, or pressure around the affected joint.

Walking or Shoe Difficulty

Pain, alignment change, or joint enlargement may make shoes uncomfortable or walking less stable.

Seek care now if…

Seek prompt evaluation if joint pain follows an injury, swelling is severe, walking becomes difficult, the joint looks deformed, or pain is rapidly worsening.

Causes & Risk Factors

Arthritis can develop from joint wear, prior injury, inflammation, alignment problems, or medical conditions that affect the joints.

Common Causes

In the foot and ankle, arthritis may develop slowly or appear after trauma that changes how a joint moves or carries weight.

Risk Factors

Diagnosis

Diagnosis focuses on identifying which joint is affected, how much motion remains, whether alignment has changed, and how arthritis is affecting walking or activity.

Typical Evaluation

What to Bring

Treatment Options

Treatment depends on the joint involved, arthritis severity, pain level, alignment, activity goals, and response to conservative care.

Related care: Treatment planning may include footwear changes, custom orthotics, joint support, medication review, injections, imaging, or surgical discussion when symptoms remain limiting.

Conservative Care

Footwear / Orthotics

Surgery Consideration

Recovery & Follow-Up

Recovery

Recovery and long-term management depend on the joint involved, arthritis severity, activity demands, and whether treatment is conservative or surgical.

What Helps Most

  • Supportive footwear: Shoes with stability and cushioning may reduce stress.
  • Orthotic support: Custom inserts may improve alignment and comfort.
  • Activity adjustment: Lower-impact activity may reduce flare-ups.
  • Weight management: Less joint load may help symptoms.
  • Follow-up care: Ongoing symptoms may need treatment adjustment.

When to Follow Up

  • Worsening pain: Symptoms are becoming more limiting.
  • Less motion: The joint feels increasingly stiff.
  • Walking difficulty: Daily movement is affected.
  • Shoe problems: Pressure or deformity is worsening.
  • Swelling persists: Inflammation does not settle.
  • Conservative care fails: Symptoms remain despite support.

Frequently Asked Questions

Arthritis may cause aching, stiffness, swelling, tenderness, reduced motion, or pain that worsens with walking, standing, or activity.

Common causes include cartilage wear, prior injury, inflammatory arthritis, alignment changes, repetitive stress, or long-term joint overload.

Diagnosis may include a symptom review, physical exam, joint motion testing, weight-bearing X-rays, and advanced imaging when more detail is needed.

Many patients start with conservative care such as footwear changes, orthotics, activity modification, medication review, bracing, or injections when appropriate.

Surgery may be discussed when pain, stiffness, deformity, or mobility limits remain significant despite conservative treatment.

Evaluation is recommended when joint pain is worsening, swelling persists, walking becomes difficult, or shoes become uncomfortable because of joint changes.

Locations

LVVIS offers vein evaluation and treatment planning at multiple Las Vegas locations. Choose the office that is most convenient when scheduling your visit.

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