Corns & Calluses
PRESSURE, FRICTION & DIABETIC FOOT RISK
Corns and calluses are thickened areas of skin that develop from repeated pressure or friction. They may seem minor, but they can become painful or risky when shoe pressure, toe deformity, diabetes, neuropathy, or circulation concerns are involved.
- Pressure and friction can build thick skin
- Pain may come from shoe fit or toe alignment
- Diabetes can increase foot-risk concerns
- Early care helps prevent skin breakdown
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: Corns and calluses usually form where repeated pressure or rubbing causes the skin to thicken. Evaluation helps identify the pressure source and reduce the risk of pain, cracking, skin breakdown, or diabetic foot complications.
Care may focus on footwear, pressure relief, toe alignment, callus monitoring, skin protection, orthotic support, and closer follow-up for patients with diabetes, neuropathy, poor circulation, or a history of foot wounds.
Overview
What Are Corns & Calluses?
Corns and calluses are areas of thickened skin caused by repeated friction, pressure, or rubbing. Corns often form on or between the toes, while calluses often develop on the bottom of the foot, heel, or ball of the foot.
Why Evaluation Matters
Removing thick skin without addressing the cause can allow the problem to return. Evaluation helps identify whether shoe pressure, foot mechanics, bunions, hammertoes, dry skin, neuropathy, or circulation concerns are contributing.
Symptoms
Corns and calluses can range from mild thickened skin to painful pressure areas. Patients with diabetes, neuropathy, poor circulation, or prior foot wounds should be especially cautious because skin changes may become more serious.
Thickened or Hardened Skin
A callus may appear as a broad patch of thick skin, often on the bottom of the foot, heel, or ball of the foot.
Painful Corns on the Toes
Corns may form on the tops, tips, or sides of toes where shoes or neighboring toes create repeated pressure.
Cracking, Irritation, or Tenderness
Thick skin can become tender, cracked, inflamed, or irritated, especially when pressure continues during walking.
Diabetic Foot Warning Signs
Redness, drainage, bleeding, odor, skin opening, color change, or increasing swelling should be evaluated promptly.
Seek care now if…
Prompt evaluation is recommended if a corn or callus is bleeding, draining, rapidly worsening, surrounded by redness, associated with swelling or odor, or appears in a patient with diabetes, neuropathy, poor circulation, or a history of foot wounds.
Causes & Risk Factors
Corns and calluses usually develop when the foot protects itself from repeated pressure. The pressure source may come from shoes, foot shape, walking mechanics, dry skin, toe position, or underlying medical risk factors.
The visible thick skin is often a clue, not the whole problem. If pressure keeps returning to the same area, the corn or callus may return even after it is reduced.
Common Causes
- Tight shoes or narrow toe boxes
- Repeated friction while walking
- High-pressure areas under the foot
- Bunions, hammertoes, or toe crowding
- Dry or cracked skin
- Changes in walking mechanics
Risk Factors
- Diabetes or neuropathy
- Poor circulation or PAD
- Prior wounds or ulcers
- Foot deformity or pressure points
- Poor footwear fit
- Reduced sensation in the feet
Diagnosis
Diagnosis focuses on confirming whether the skin change is a corn, callus, wart, pressure injury, or early skin breakdown, while also identifying the pressure source and any diabetic foot-risk factors.
Typical Evaluation
- Review symptoms and walking pain
- Inspect the skin and pressure area
- Check shoes and pressure patterns
- Assess toe position and foot mechanics
- Screen sensation when diabetes is present
- Consider circulation concerns when needed
What to Bring
- Shoes worn most often
- Inserts or orthotics
- Diabetes or vascular history
- Prior wound or ulcer history
- Medication list if relevant
Treatment Options
Treatment depends on the location, pressure source, pain level, skin condition, and patient risk factors. Care may include pressure relief, footwear changes, callus reduction, padding, orthotics, and follow-up when diabetes or circulation concerns are present.
Related care: Treatment planning may include foot protection, shoe-pressure review, orthotic support, diabetic foot monitoring, and coordinated foot, ankle, wound-risk, or vascular evaluation when needed.
Pressure Relief
- Shoe fit review
- Padding or protective supports
- Reduced rubbing and friction
- Pressure-point monitoring
Skin & Callus Care
- Professional callus reduction when appropriate
- Moisture and skin-care guidance
- Avoiding unsafe cutting at home
- Monitoring for cracking or bleeding
Foot Mechanics Support
- Custom orthotics when appropriate
- Toe alignment evaluation
- Bunion or hammertoe assessment
- Walking and pressure-pattern review
High-Risk Follow-Up
- Diabetes or neuropathy
- Poor circulation concerns
- Prior wounds or ulcers
- Skin breakdown or drainage
Recovery
Relief depends on reducing the pressure that caused the corn or callus. Thickened skin may improve with professional care and protection, but it can return if shoe friction, toe position, or walking mechanics are not addressed.
What Helps Most
- Pressure control: Reduce rubbing from shoes, seams, or toe crowding.
- Footwear changes: Wear shoes with enough width, depth, and support.
- Skin monitoring: Watch for cracking, bleeding, redness, or drainage.
- Orthotic support: Inserts may help redistribute pressure.
- Diabetic foot checks: Higher-risk patients should avoid self-cutting and seek evaluation early.
When to Follow Up
- Pain continues: Pressure or tenderness is not improving.
- Skin breaks open: Cracking, bleeding, or drainage appears.
- Redness spreads: Inflammation or infection signs are increasing.
- Callus returns quickly: The pressure source may still be present.
- Diabetes is present: Corns and calluses should be monitored carefully.
Frequently Asked Questions
Corns and calluses form when repeated pressure or friction causes the skin to thicken. Shoes, toe crowding, bunions, hammertoes, walking mechanics, and high-pressure areas under the foot can contribute.
They are often manageable, but they can become painful or risky if the skin cracks, bleeds, drains, or breaks down. Patients with diabetes, neuropathy, poor circulation, or prior wounds should be especially cautious.
No, especially if you have diabetes, neuropathy, or circulation problems. Cutting the skin or using harsh chemical removers can cause burns, wounds, ulcers, or infection.
Treatment may include pressure relief, shoe changes, padding, callus reduction by a clinician, orthotics, and evaluation of toe position or foot mechanics when pressure keeps returning.
Calluses often return when the pressure source is still present. Shoes, inserts, foot structure, toe deformity, or walking mechanics may need to be addressed.
Seek evaluation if the area is painful, bleeding, draining, red, swollen, cracking, or worsening, or if you have diabetes, neuropathy, poor circulation, or a history of foot wounds.
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