(972) 314-5177Prosper, Texas
No referral needed for most patients

Foot & Ankle Pain

Podiatrist evaluating ongoing foot and ankle pain

Foot and ankle pain can come from overuse, injury, arthritis, tendon problems, instability, or structural issues. Pain is often the symptom patients notice first, but the underlying cause is not always where the pain seems to sit.

What evaluation focuses on

  • Where the pain starts and when it shows up
  • Whether swelling, stiffness, or instability are part of the picture
  • How walking, work, exercise, or footwear affect symptoms
  • Whether the issue is getting worse, changing, or recurring

How TSB Podiatry approaches it

Dr. Boehm’s goal is to narrow the problem down clearly and then match treatment to the patient’s lifestyle, health, and goals. That may involve conservative treatment, more targeted support, or discussion of next-step options when needed.

When to schedule

If pain is lingering, coming back, or making it harder to stay active, it is worth getting it checked rather than continuing to guess at the cause.

Common questions about foot and ankle pain

Why can foot or ankle pain be hard to figure out on my own?

Pain does not always show up exactly where the real problem starts. Tendons, joints, nerves, instability, arthritis, and structure can all overlap in ways that feel similar without an exam.

Is pain without a major injury still worth getting checked?

Yes. A lot of foot and ankle pain builds over time from overuse, compensation, mechanics, shoe pressure, or conditions that were not triggered by one obvious event.

What if the pain comes and goes?

Intermittent pain can still matter, especially if it keeps returning with the same activities, stiffness after rest, or a slow decline in tolerance for walking, work, or exercise.

When does foot or ankle pain stop being something to just manage at home?

If you are changing how you walk, cutting back activity, or trying the same self-treatment without real progress, it is time to move beyond guesswork.

Will treatment always mean surgery?

No. Many problems respond to conservative treatment, support, activity changes, bracing, orthotics, or a more targeted plan. Surgery is part of the conversation only when the problem calls for it.

Book Appointment Call (972) 314-5177