Foot and ankle pain can affect every step you take, from walking and standing to exercising and staying active throughout the day. Many patients struggle with recurring pain, instability, stiffness, or injuries that never seem to fully heal.
At North Texas Musculoskeletal Medicine, Dr. Dennis E. Minotti, DO and Dr. Rijo Philip, DO provide non-surgical treatment options for foot and ankle conditions using regenerative medicine and Osteopathic Manipulative Medicine. Our goal is to reduce pain, improve mobility, and support long-term stability and function.
Foot and ankle conditions can affect the way your body moves, balances, and absorbs impact throughout the day. Some patients notice pain gradually building from repetitive stress and overuse, while others develop symptoms after an injury, ankle sprain, or increase in activity. Because the feet and ankles support every step you take, even mild irritation may begin affecting mobility, exercise, and overall comfort surprisingly quickly.
Common foot and ankle conditions include:
- Plantar fasciitis
- Achilles tendonitis
- Chronic ankle instability
- Ankle sprains
- Tendon injuries
- Heel pain
- Arthritis
- Flat feet and arch dysfunction
- Stress injuries
- Overuse conditions
Common symptoms may include:
- Heel pain
- Pain with walking
- Swelling
- Ankle instability
- Pain first thing in the morning
- Difficulty standing for long periods
- Weakness
- Limited mobility
- Pain during running or exercise
- Recurring ankle rolling
- Stiffness after activity
Foot & Ankle Treatments
Regenerative Procedures
Regenerative medicine focuses on supporting the body’s natural healing response and tissue recovery.
PRP for Foot & Ankle Injuries
PRP uses concentrated platelets from your blood to support healing and reduce inflammation in damaged tendons, ligaments, and soft tissue structures. PRP may be considered for plantar fasciitis, Achilles tendonitis, chronic sprains, and overuse injuries. Learn more.
Stem Cell Therapy / BMAC
Stem cell therapy and BMAC use cells and growth factors from bone marrow to support tissue repair and healing. These procedures may be considered for chronic degeneration, cartilage injuries, arthritis-related conditions, and more advanced tissue damage. Learn more.
Prolotherapy
Prolotherapy uses targeted injections to stimulate healing and strengthen weakened or irritated connective tissue. It may be considered for ligament instability and recurring ankle sprains. About prolotherapy.
ESW / EMTT
ESW and EMTT use non-invasive energy-based technology to stimulate healing, improve circulation, and reduce chronic pain in irritated soft tissues. Learn more.
Osteopathic Manipulation
Osteopathic Manipulative Medicine (OMM) evaluates gait mechanics, movement patterns, alignment, and compensation throughout the lower body. Our hands-on approach focuses on improving mobility and reducing abnormal stress patterns that may contribute to chronic foot and ankle pain over time.
Natural Healing
Conservative treatment may include activity modification, supportive exercise, rehabilitation guidance, bracing, and footwear recommendations when appropriate. If conservative care has not provided lasting relief, regenerative medicine and osteopathic treatment may be considered.
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Get Treatment for Your Foot and Ankle Pain
Why Foot & Ankle Pain Often Becomes Chronic
The foot and ankle absorb force throughout the day with every step, shift in balance, and movement pattern. Because these structures are constantly under stress, even small injuries may worsen over time if the underlying problem is not fully addressed.
Poor tendon blood supply, repetitive strain, instability, altered gait mechanics, chronic inflammation, and compensation patterns may all contribute to recurring pain and reduced mobility.
How Foot & Ankle Mechanics Affect the Entire Body
The foot and ankle play a major role in balance, shock absorption, alignment, and walking mechanics. When movement becomes restricted or unstable, the body often compensates by placing additional stress on the knees, hips, pelvis, and lower back.
Dr. Rijo Philip, DO focuses on how movement dysfunction and compensation patterns throughout the body may contribute to chronic foot and ankle pain. Improving mechanics and stability may help reduce long-term strain on surrounding joints and connective tissues.
Can Foot & Ankle Conditions Heal Without Surgery?
Some cases of plantar fasciitis, Achilles tendonitis, ankle instability, arthritis, and overuse injuries may improve with conservative care, regenerative medicine, and osteopathic treatment when appropriate.
Treatment recommendations depend on the severity of tissue damage, activity level, and long-term goals.
What to Expect During Your Evaluation
Your visit begins with a detailed discussion about symptoms, injuries, activity level, footwear, and treatment history. Dennis E. Minotti, DO and Dr. Rijo Philip, DO evaluate gait mechanics, balance, instability, range of motion, and movement patterns contributing to stress on the foot and ankle.
Ultrasound evaluation may also be used to assess tendons, ligaments, and soft tissue structures in real time.
Personalized Treatment Planning
Treatment recommendations depend on tissue health, inflammation, movement mechanics, instability, and prior response to conservative care. Recommendations may include PRP, stem cell therapy, prolotherapy, ESW/EMTT, rehabilitation guidance, or Osteopathic Manipulative Medicine depending on the condition and tissue involved.
Recovery timelines, activity modifications, and return-to-exercise goals are also reviewed during the consultation process.
Risks of Repeated Cortisone Injections
Corticosteroid injections may temporarily reduce inflammation and pain. However, repeated use may raise concerns regarding tendon weakening, cartilage damage, connective tissue health, and long-term joint stability.
At our practice, treatment planning focuses on supporting tissue healing, movement quality, and long-term shoulder function whenever appropriate.
Foot and Ankle FAQs
Why does my heel hurt in the morning?
Morning heel pain is commonly linked to plantar fasciitis, tight connective tissue, inflammation, or repetitive stress involving the bottom of the foot.
Can PRP help plantar fasciitis?
PRP may help reduce pain and support healing in some patients with chronic plantar fasciitis by promoting the body’s natural healing response.
Why does my ankle keep rolling?
Recurring ankle rolling may be linked to ligament weakness, instability, poor balance mechanics, or incomplete healing after previous sprains.
Can Achilles tendonitis heal without surgery?
Recurring ankle rolling may be linked to ligament weakness, instability, poor balance mechanics, or incomplete healing after previous sprains.
Why does my ankle keep rolling?
Many cases of Achilles tendonitis improve with conservative care, regenerative medicine, rehabilitation, and activity modification when appropriate.
What causes chronic ankle instability?
Chronic ankle instability often develops after repeated sprains or ligament injuries that do not fully heal, leading to weakness and reduced support around the joint.
Can regenerative medicine help heel pain?
Some causes of chronic heel pain may respond to regenerative medicine depending on the tissue involved and severity of degeneration or inflammation.
Is walking good for plantar fasciitis?
Controlled movement and supportive rehabilitation are often beneficial, but activity should match the severity of symptoms and tissue irritation.
Helping DFW Patients
North Texas Musculoskeletal Medicine provides non-surgical foot and ankle treatment for patients throughout the Dallas–Fort Worth area. We help active adults, runners, working professionals, and patients with chronic mobility issues explore regenerative medicine and osteopathic treatment options designed to improve stability, mobility, and long-term function.
Foot and ankle pain can affect every part of daily life, from standing at work to exercising, walking, and staying active with confidence. If recurring pain, instability, or mobility limitations are affecting your quality of life, our team can help you explore non-surgical treatment options designed to support healing and long-term movement.