Case 016: The Cushion Job
Failed to add items
Add to Cart failed.
Add to Wish List failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
Case 016: The Cushion Job — Heel Fat Pad Syndrome
This case is easy to misread. The runner reports a deep, bruised ache right in the centre of the heel — as if they are landing on a stone that never moves. They’ve often already been told it is plantar fasciitis. They’ve stretched, rolled, loaded, maybe even worn a night splint. And still the pain stays exactly where it started. Because this is not a fascia problem. It is a cushioning problem.
In this episode of The Foot Detective, we open the file on Heel Fat Pad Syndrome — the quiet failure of one of the foot’s most overlooked shock absorbers. We follow the clues through central heel pain, years of impact loading, thinning fat pad tissue, hard running surfaces, minimal footwear, and the common mistake of treating the wrong structure for months at a time.
This is not a story about inflammation at the edge of the heel. It is a story about what happens when the calcaneus loses the protective padding that once stood between bone and ground. We look at how to distinguish fat pad pain from plantar fasciitis, why age, mileage, surface, and shoe choice all matter, and what management actually helps when the issue is not tightness — but lost protection.
Because sometimes the heel is not asking to be stretched. Sometimes it is asking for its cushion back.
Feet don’t lie. I just follow the clues.