Hi I’ve been dealing with this for about 2 years now, I’m super active and I’ve always played 2 sports at once in my life and once I got severed disease it’s been pretty hard. As you can guess it’s very hard for me to get out of sports because I love it so much. I’m hurting myself by keep on playing and I refuse to do therapy.
I’m a competitive gymnast. Lately it’s been really bothering me, like I could be walking and it hurts so badly. Sharp pain 24/7 when I am on it. Would you recommend me going to the doctor, I have read if it is bad enough you could be put in a cast so I’m not really sure what to do? I also ice it and do exercises but nothing seems to get rid of the pain
I have had this for years on and off and just getting back into soccer after Corona the pain is back. I am 14 now and have had it since i was 10 or 11. Never ending pain during sports. I stretch my calfs a lot and ice my heals but nothing seems to ever work.
Hey Wyatt, I’m 15 and have been dealing with severs disease for a couple of years but gladly for me my growth plate is almost gone so the disease should be gone soon. But I don’t know if it’s just me or because my dad was a PT but I have gotten it down to where it only happens twice or three times a year and the pain goes away completely, running without pain, within two weeks. I take pills called Oscon twice a day, I’ve with putting water in a cup freezing it and rolling my heel on the ice, and getting heel cups, wearing arch supports in ALL my shoes and doing a series of stretches. With Severs disease you have to stay consistent with wearing arches and taking the pills and wearing heel cups and stretching to take a way the amount of times it happens or eliminate the pain when it does. I hope this helps!
Hi Zethimuss, there are quite normal bumps on the back of the heel called ‘Haglund’s deformities’ and are extremely common and not a problem. If you are concerned, a simple X-ray can rule out a lot of problems if a clinician is worried. Pete
Thank you for this video, my ortho final is tomorrow and this was very helpful!
Hi I’ve been dealing with this for about 2 years now, I’m super active and I’ve always played 2 sports at once in my life and once I got severed disease it’s been pretty hard. As you can guess it’s very hard for me to get out of sports because I love it so much. I’m hurting myself by keep on playing and I refuse to do therapy.
Then don’t complain
I’m a competitive gymnast. Lately it’s been really bothering me, like I could be walking and it hurts so badly. Sharp pain 24/7 when I am on it. Would you recommend me going to the doctor, I have read if it is bad enough you could be put in a cast so I’m not really sure what to do? I also ice it and do exercises but nothing seems to get rid of the pain
I have had this for years on and off and just getting back into soccer after Corona the pain is back. I am 14 now and have had it since i was 10 or 11. Never ending pain during sports. I stretch my calfs a lot and ice my heals but nothing seems to ever work.
Hey Wyatt, I’m 15 and have been dealing with severs disease for a couple of years but gladly for me my growth plate is almost gone so the disease should be gone soon. But I don’t know if it’s just me or because my dad was a PT but I have gotten it down to where it only happens twice or three times a year and the pain goes away completely, running without pain, within two weeks. I take pills called Oscon twice a day, I’ve with putting water in a cup freezing it and rolling my heel on the ice, and getting heel cups, wearing arch supports in ALL my shoes and doing a series of stretches. With Severs disease you have to stay consistent with wearing arches and taking the pills and wearing heel cups and stretching to take a way the amount of times it happens or eliminate the pain when it does. I hope this helps!
I think we might be the same person .
The pain is so Hard to play through
i cant run with it and ive had it for like 3 years and it won't go away
@@lucasbrunze615 Thank's sorry for late reply
@@gilbertron1129 Yeah it sucks some of my teammates had it too.
Hello, I have one heel which is bigger than the other, no bumps no redness no nothing I am currently 14 is this a serious problem
Hi Zethimuss, there are quite normal bumps on the back of the heel called ‘Haglund’s deformities’ and are extremely common and not a problem. If you are concerned, a simple X-ray can rule out a lot of problems if a clinician is worried.
Pete
@@ShoesFeetGearBrisbane Hello, I don't have any bumps, no deformities. It's just my left heel is bigger than my right.
I’m 14 and I play a lot of football and my heel has been hurting a lot for these past weeks and i think it is severs