Friday, June 5, 2009

Arizona Podiatry

Arizona Podiatry - Podiatrist in Phoenix and Scottsdale

A common sense approach to podiatric practice. Podiatry should take a customer care approach, one that ensures a pain free approach to medicine that finds solutions to problems as soon as possible. Gentle care should be taken to create an experience that causes you to want to adopt your new physician.

A good Arizona Podiatrist should have an x-ray with technician on site to quickly determine any internal injuries. Podiatrists should always determine if a custom-molded orthotic will clear up any problems.

Diabetic Medicare patients should be aware that they are eligible for an extra-depth shoe and accommodative insert program every year.

Neuropathy Paid patients should be offered A Micro Vas program.

Arizona Podiatry Education

A podiatrist should have 3-4 years of undergraduate work as well as 4 years in a college program ending in state examinations.

Podiatry and the Human Foot

The human foot is a complex structure. It contains 26 bones—plus muscles, nerves, ligaments, and blood vessels—and is designed for balance and mobility. The 52 bones in the feet make up about one-fourth of all the bones in the human body. Podiatrists, also known as doctors of podiatric medicine (DPMs), diagnose and treat disorders, diseases, and injuries of the foot and lower leg.

Each foot contains 26 bones. Each of which, all alone, can provide intense pain. The bones are surrounded by muscles, ligaments, blood vessels and nerves. That's for each foot. There are disorders, diseases and injuries that can happen in a foot as well as the lower leg. Doctors of podiatric medicine (DPMs) are your only life line to relief.

Podiatry also treats more common problems such as: calluses, ingrown toenails, corns, heel spurs, arch complications and bunions. They also treat and monitor infections, deformitities and injuries as well as complications with diabetes and other diseases.

This involves drug prescriptions, pysical therapy, surgery and the aligning and setting of fractures.

Very often treatment involves diagnosing by having a patient walk across a special "plate" which is connected to a computer program and determines pressure locations and where weight is distributed throughout the walking process. A podiatrist can then "read" the results and make recommendations or treatments.

Podiatrist - Arizona Podiatry in Phoenix or Scottsdale


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