Minimally Invasive Bunion Surgery

FOOT & ANKLE DEFORMITY CORRECTION

Minimally invasive bunion surgery uses smaller incisions and specialized instruments to correct selected bunion deformities. For appropriate patients, this approach may reduce soft tissue disruption while improving alignment, shoe comfort, and foot function.

Evaluation & Next Steps

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Hours: Mon-Fri: 8am-5pm

Quick Summary

Key takeaway: Minimally invasive bunion surgery corrects selected bunion deformities through smaller incisions while realigning the big toe joint.

The procedure may be considered when bunion pain, shoe irritation, deformity progression, or activity limits do not improve enough with conservative care. The best approach depends on deformity severity, joint health, foot structure, activity goals, and healing risk.

WHAT IS MINIMALLY INVASIVE BUNION SURGERY?

Minimally invasive bunion surgery is a surgical approach used to correct selected bunion deformities through smaller incisions. Specialized instruments are used to realign the bone and improve the position of the big toe joint.

A bunion forms when the big toe joint shifts out of alignment, often creating a painful bump on the inside of the foot. Surgery may involve cutting and repositioning bone, correcting soft tissue balance, and stabilizing the correction with hardware.

Minimally invasive surgery is not appropriate for every bunion. Severe deformity, arthritis, poor bone quality, circulation problems, or complex foot mechanics may require a different procedure or treatment plan.

Who May Be a Good Candidate

A full evaluation helps determine whether minimally invasive bunion surgery is appropriate based on deformity severity, joint health, imaging, activity goals, and healing risk.

Conditions Treated

Minimally invasive bunion surgery may be considered for selected bunion deformities when pain, irritation, or alignment problems continue despite non-surgical care.

Bunions

A bunion can create a painful bump, toe drift, shoe irritation, and pressure around the big toe joint.

Hallux Valgus

Big toe joint misalignment may worsen over time and affect foot mechanics.

Shoe Pressure Pain

Prominent bunions may rub against shoes and cause inflammation, redness, or discomfort.

Progressive Toe Deformity

Toe drift and forefoot imbalance may require correction when symptoms progress.

Benefits of Treatment

Benefits depend on deformity severity, joint health, surgical technique, healing ability, and recovery compliance.

How the Procedure Works / What to Expect

Minimally invasive bunion surgery is planned using exam findings and imaging. Small incisions are used to access and realign the bones involved in the bunion deformity.

Preparation Before Treatment

During the Procedure

Recovery & Aftercare

Risks / Considerations

Related Treatments / Alternatives

Depending on bunion severity, foot mechanics, and activity goals, bunion surgery may be considered alongside orthotics, footwear changes, or broader foot surgery planning.

Foot Surgery

Surgical care for selected foot and ankle problems that require structural correction.

Custom Orthotics

Prescription shoe inserts used to support foot mechanics and reduce painful pressure.

Frequently Asked Questions

Minimally invasive bunion surgery uses smaller incisions and specialized instruments to correct selected bunion deformities and improve big toe alignment.
Candidates may include selected patients with painful bunions, shoe irritation, worsening alignment, or activity limits that have not improved enough with conservative care.
No. Severe deformity, arthritis, poor bone quality, circulation problems, or complex mechanics may require another surgical approach.
Recovery varies by procedure and correction type. Many patients need a protective shoe, swelling control, follow-up visits, and gradual return to activity.
Recurrence is possible, especially if foot mechanics, deformity severity, or healing factors affect the correction. Follow-up and proper recovery are important.
The best approach depends on X-rays, deformity severity, joint health, symptoms, activity goals, medical history, and healing risk.

Locations

LVVIS offers foot and ankle 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