Hi all, I trust you're all well and good. Look, I have a problem and thanks for allowing me to post on this here forum. I'm from Queensland and recovered from a chronic illness over the last few months. Maybe my feet weren't conditioned enough I don't know. What's happened is I built up my walking until I was doing around 40km to reach an average walk of 50km a day. About a month ago I got this bad pain in my right foot. For a few days I could hardly walk, then it was kinda ok so I did a mountain and a little running, gym etc, and it got much worse. The other week it landed me in hospital. The pain was so intense I had to splint the leg up to the knee. Xrays show no broken bones. Doctor said it might be muscle damage, ligament or a tendon problem. They're not sure.
It's been about 4-5 weeks since I've walked for more than a couple of kilometers and I'm frustrated and trying to get out. Can't do much until I get this foot fixed. I'm a new hiker and looking for advice. I currently rest (and have rested and rested til the walls close in), ice a lot, compression, elevation for the foot, use Voltaren gel, and I find running my foot over a golf ball helps the arch, at least, takes away some of the strain. I've seen three doctors who can't give me an answer as to exactly what I've done and how to treat it and prevent it recurring.
Do you have any suggestions how I can get this foot better? I'm hoping someone here's had the same problem. The worse area is about an inch below the ankle on the far right, above the blade edge of the right foot. It's swollen and there's pain through the front and underside and I get shooting pains up the ankle. I haven't been able to put full weight on for many weeks and I'm elevating my leg most of the time. Also, any suggestions how to improve my foot and ankle so it doesn't happen again?
Sorry to throw this at you. My fitness level was just getting to the place I wanted it to be and this hurdle's becoming a bit much to overcome without a little help.
I'm new to hiking. I stare at my equipment and sigh.