- Overview of Foot and Ankle Problems
- Achilles Tendon Bursitis
- Achilles Tendon Enthesopathy
- Bunion
- Damage to Nerves in the Foot
- Freiberg Disease
- Hammer Toe
- Inferior Calcaneal Bursitis
- Medial and Lateral Plantar Nerve Entrapment
- Metatarsal Joint Pain
- Pain in the Ball of the Foot (Metatarsalgia)
- Plantar Fasciitis
- Plantar Fibromatosis
- Sesamoiditis
- Tarsal Tunnel Syndrome
- Tibialis Posterior Tendinosis and Tibialis Posterior Tenosynovitis
Plantar fibromatosis is a noncancerous (benign) enlargement of connective tissue in the sole (the plantar fascia).
In plantar fibromatosis, bumps develop on the sole and are most obvious when the big toe is pulled back and the foot is bent upward toward the leg. Many people also have bumps in the palms, usually located near the fourth knuckle.
Doctors base the diagnosis of plantar fibromatosis on an examination of the foot.
Treatment of plantar fibromatosis is usually not worthwhile unless the bumps become large enough to cause pain when bearing weight. If so, orthoses (devices placed in the shoe) can help redistribute pressure away from the bumps. Corticosteroid injections directly into the nodule may be tried.
(See also Overview of Foot Problems.)