Foot Surgery
FOOT SURGERY & RECOVERY PLANNING
Foot surgery may be considered when pain, deformity, injury, arthritis, or chronic foot problems do not improve enough with conservative care. Evaluation helps determine whether surgery is appropriate, what alternatives exist, and what recovery may involve.
- Surgery may follow failed conservative care
- Planning depends on diagnosis and structure
- Recovery varies by procedure and health
- Evaluation helps compare options and risks
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: Foot surgery is not one procedure. It is a treatment category used for selected foot and ankle problems when symptoms, structure, function, or injury severity require more than conservative care.
Evaluation focuses on diagnosis, imaging, prior treatment, activity goals, medical risk factors, and whether non-surgical options should continue before any surgical plan is considered.
Overview
What is Foot Surgery?
Foot surgery includes procedures used to correct deformity, repair injury, address painful joints, remove problematic tissue, or improve foot function when conservative care is not enough.
Why Evaluation Matters
The right surgical plan depends on the condition, severity, alignment, circulation, skin health, activity level, and recovery needs. Evaluation helps determine whether surgery is appropriate or whether other treatment options should be tried first.
Symptoms
Foot surgery may be discussed when symptoms are persistent, worsening, or tied to a structural problem, injury, or condition that limits comfort, footwear, walking, or daily activity.
Persistent Foot Pain
Pain continues despite footwear changes, orthotics, medication, injections, bracing, or activity modification.
Visible Deformity
A bunion, hammertoe, collapsed arch, shortened toe, or other structural change affects comfort or shoe fit.
Limited Function
Walking, standing, work, sports, or daily activity becomes harder because of pain, weakness, stiffness, or instability.
Recurring Problems
Symptoms keep returning, wounds develop over pressure points, or conservative care no longer provides enough relief.
Seek care now if…
Seek prompt evaluation if foot pain follows an injury, there is deformity, an open wound, spreading redness, numbness, circulation concern, or you cannot bear weight comfortably.
Causes & Risk Factors
Foot surgery may be considered for different causes of pain, deformity, instability, injury, or long-term mechanical stress.
Common Causes
- Bunions or hammertoes
- Fractures or traumatic injury
- Arthritis or joint damage
- Tendon or ligament problems
- Neuroma or soft-tissue pain
- Recurrent pressure points or wounds
Surgical planning depends on the underlying diagnosis, not just the symptom. Imaging, exam findings, and treatment history help define the problem.
Risk Factors
- Persistent symptoms despite care
- Progressive deformity
- Poor footwear tolerance
- Diabetes or wound-healing concerns
- Circulation or nerve problems
- High activity demands
- Prior injury or surgery
- Medical conditions affecting recovery
Diagnosis
Diagnosis starts with a focused exam and review of symptoms, prior treatment, imaging, medical history, and activity goals. Surgery is considered only after the condition and severity are clearly defined.
Typical Evaluation
- Symptom and activity review
- Foot and ankle exam
- Weight-bearing X-rays when needed
- MRI, CT, or ultrasound when appropriate
- Circulation and skin check when relevant
- Review of conservative care tried
What to Bring
- Prior imaging or records
- Current medications
- Medical history and allergies
- Shoes or orthotics used
- List of treatments tried
- Recovery and activity goals
Treatment Options
Treatment planning depends on the diagnosis, symptom severity, foot structure, medical risk factors, and whether conservative options are still appropriate. Surgery is considered when the expected benefit outweighs the risks and recovery demands.
Related care: Planning may include conservative treatment review, footwear or orthotic support, imaging, surgical consultation, and recovery guidance based on the specific foot condition.
Conservative Care
- Footwear changes
- Orthotics or padding
- Activity modification
- Medication review
- Injection discussion when appropriate
Footwear / Orthotics
- Pressure relief
- Arch or joint support
- Shoe-fit guidance
- Custom orthotic planning
Surgery Consideration
- Persistent pain
- Progressive deformity
- Failed conservative care
- Functional limitation
- Procedure-specific risk review
Recovery & Follow-Up
- Protected weight bearing
- Wound and swelling checks
- Rehabilitation planning
- Return-to-activity guidance
Recovery
Recovery depends on the procedure, bone and soft-tissue healing, medical risk factors, weight-bearing restrictions, and how closely the recovery plan is followed.
What Helps Most
- Follow instructions: Weight-bearing and wound-care limits matter.
- Control swelling: Elevation and protection support healing.
- Keep follow-ups: Healing progress needs monitoring.
- Use devices correctly: Boots, casts, or crutches protect repairs.
- Rehab when advised: Therapy may help restore strength and motion.
When to Follow Up
- Increasing pain: Symptoms worsen instead of improving.
- Wound concerns: Drainage, redness, or opening develops.
- New numbness: Sensation changes or weakness appears.
- Swelling concerns: Swelling becomes severe or one-sided.
- Device problems: A boot, cast, or dressing feels too tight.
- Recovery stalls: Function is not progressing as expected.
Frequently Asked Questions
Foot surgery may be considered when pain, deformity, injury, instability, or function does not improve enough with conservative care, or when the problem is unlikely to heal properly without surgical treatment.
No. Many foot problems improve with footwear changes, orthotics, bracing, medication, injections, activity modification, or rehabilitation. Surgery is considered only when it is appropriate for the diagnosis and goals.
Evaluation may include a physical exam, weight-bearing X-rays, and sometimes MRI, CT, ultrasound, vascular testing, or lab work depending on the condition and medical history.
Recovery depends on the procedure, whether bone or soft tissue is involved, weight-bearing restrictions, and overall health. Some recoveries are measured in weeks, while others take several months.
Some procedures require a boot, splint, cast, crutches, or limited weight bearing. The exact plan depends on the procedure and how much protection is needed for healing.
Ask about the diagnosis, non-surgical options, expected recovery, weight-bearing limits, risks, alternatives, follow-up schedule, and when you may return to work or activity.
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