What is calcaneal apophysitis?
The heel bone is called the calcaneus. In children, there is an
area on the heel bone where the bone grows that is called the
growth plate, or apophysis. Calcaneal apophysitis, also called
Sever's disease, is inflammation of the calcaneal growth plate
that causes pain in the heel. It is the most common cause of heel
pain in children, adolescents, and teenagers.
How does it occur?
This inflamed heel growth plate is caused by overusing the foot
with repetitive heel strikes. It may also occur from wearing shoes
with poor heel padding or poor arch supports.
What are the symptoms?
A child will complain of heel pain. Running and jumping usually
increase the symptoms.
How is it diagnosed?
The healthcare provider will find tenderness over the bottom part
of your child's heel. In severe cases of calcaneal apophysitis, he
or she may order an X-ray to be sure there is no damage to the
growth plate.
How is it treated?
Your child may need to rest or do activities that do not cause
heel pain. It is very important that your child wear shoes with
padded heel surfaces and good arch supports. Extra heel pads may
be placed in your child's shoe. Your healthcare provider may
recommend shoe inserts, called orthotics. You can buy orthotics at
a pharmacy or athletic shoe store or they can be custom-made. Your
provider may also prescribe an anti-inflammatory medicine for your
child.
How long will the effects last?
Pain from calcaneal apophysitis may last weeks to months and may
come back if your child returns to sports or strenuous activities
too soon.
When can my child return to normal activities?
Everyone recovers from an injury at a different rate. Return to
activity will be determined by how soon your child's heel
recovers, not by how many days or weeks it has been since your
injury has occurred. In general, the longer your child has
symptoms before starting treatment, the longer it will take to get
better. The goal of rehabilitation is to return your child to his
or her normal activities as soon as is safely possible. If your
child returns too soon he or she may worsen the injury.
If the heel hurts, your child needs to rest from sports or other
strenuous activities. Your child should rest for several days at a
time and then go back gradually. Before returning, he or she
should be able to jog painlessly, then sprint painlessly, and be
able to hop on the injured foot painlessly. If at any time during
this process your child develops further heel pain, he or she
should rest for 3 to 4 more days until the pain is gone before
trying to return again.
How calcaneal apophysitis be prevented?
Calcaneal apophysitis is best prevented by having your child wear
shoes that fit properly. The heel portion of the shoe should not
be too tight, and there should be good padding in the heel. You
may want to put extra heel pads in your child's shoes.
Some children simply get too much physical activity (such as
playing on too many teams, practicing for hours, etc). Their heel
pain is a message to slow down.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
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