Charcot Foot

NEUROPATHIC FOOT & LIMB PROTECTION

Charcot foot is a serious condition where weakened bones and joints in the foot can shift or collapse, often in people with neuropathy. Early swelling, warmth, redness, or shape change should be evaluated promptly to reduce pressure, deformity, wound risk, and long-term walking problems.

Evaluation & Next Steps

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

Quick Summary

Key takeaway: Charcot foot can cause bones and joints to weaken, shift, or collapse, often with swelling, warmth, redness, or shape change rather than severe pain.

Evaluation focuses on identifying active Charcot changes, reducing pressure on the foot, protecting skin and joints, and planning treatment or follow-up to lower the risk of wounds and deformity progression.

Overview

What is Charcot Foot?

Charcot foot is a progressive foot condition that can occur when nerve damage reduces normal protective sensation. Without normal pain signals, bones and joints may become injured, inflamed, unstable, or deformed.

Why Evaluation Matters

Early Charcot foot can look like infection, sprain, or swelling from another cause. Evaluation helps determine whether the foot needs offloading, immobilization, imaging, wound prevention, or closer follow-up to protect long-term function.

Symptoms

Symptoms may appear suddenly or develop gradually. Pain may be mild compared with the amount of swelling or structural change, especially when neuropathy is present.

Warm, Swollen Foot

The foot may become noticeably warm, swollen, or red compared with the other side.

Shape or Arch Change

The arch may flatten, the foot may widen, or pressure areas may become more prominent.

Reduced Sensation

Neuropathy may make it harder to feel injury, pressure, blisters, or skin breakdown.

Walking or Shoe-Fit Problems

Shoes may feel tighter, walking may change, or pressure points may develop as alignment shifts.

Seek care now if…

Seek prompt evaluation if one foot becomes suddenly warm, swollen, red, or changes shape, especially if you have diabetes, neuropathy, a wound, fever, or trouble bearing weight.

Causes & Risk Factors

Charcot foot is most often associated with neuropathy, which reduces the ability to feel injury or pressure. Repeated stress can then damage bones and joints before the problem is obvious.

Common Causes

When protective sensation is reduced, normal walking pressure or minor trauma can trigger inflammation, instability, and progressive changes in foot structure.

Risk Factors

Diagnosis

Diagnosis focuses on distinguishing Charcot foot from infection, sprain, fracture, arthritis, or circulation problems. Imaging and a careful foot exam help determine whether the condition is active and how much protection is needed.

Typical Evaluation

What to Bring

Treatment Options

Treatment depends on whether Charcot foot is active, whether deformity or wounds are present, and how much protection the foot needs. The priority is reducing pressure, protecting skin, and preventing progression.

Related care: Treatment planning may include offloading, custom footwear, bracing, wound prevention, imaging review, and surgical discussion when deformity or pressure risk is significant.

Conservative Care

Footwear / Orthotics

Surgery Consideration

Recovery & Follow-Up

Recovery

Recovery and long-term management depend on how early Charcot foot is identified, whether bones and joints are still changing, and whether wounds or deformity are present. Protection and follow-up are often long-term priorities.

What Helps Most

  • Pressure reduction: Offloading protects weakened bones and joints.
  • Skin checks: Watch for redness, blisters, wounds, or pressure marks.
  • Footwear compliance: Use prescribed shoes, inserts, or braces as directed.
  • Diabetes control: Good blood sugar control supports healing and prevention.
  • Follow-up imaging: Monitoring helps track stability and progression.

When to Follow Up

  • New warmth or swelling: A sudden change should be checked.
  • Shape change: Arch collapse or widening needs evaluation.
  • Skin breakdown: Any wound or blister needs prompt care.
  • Shoe-fit changes: New pressure may signal alignment change.
  • Walking changes: Limping or instability should be reviewed.

Frequently Asked Questions

Charcot foot is a condition where bones and joints in the foot weaken, shift, or collapse, often because neuropathy reduces normal pain and pressure signals.

It is commonly linked to diabetes-related neuropathy, although any condition that causes significant loss of protective sensation can increase risk.

Neuropathy can reduce pain sensation, so Charcot foot may cause major swelling, warmth, or shape change without severe pain.

Diagnosis may include a foot exam, neuropathy assessment, temperature comparison, X-rays, advanced imaging, and wound or pressure-point evaluation.

Some cases are managed with offloading, immobilization, custom footwear, bracing, and close follow-up. Surgery may be considered when deformity, instability, or wound risk is significant.

Seek evaluation if one foot becomes warm, swollen, red, changes shape, develops a wound, or becomes harder to fit into shoes, especially if you have neuropathy or diabetes.

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