Initial Management of Tarsal Tunnel Syndrome
Conservative management should be the first-line treatment for tarsal tunnel syndrome, including activity modification, pain relief medications, physical therapy, and corticosteroid injections into the tarsal tunnel. 1, 2
Conservative Treatment Approach
First-Line Interventions
- Activity modification is essential, particularly reducing or temporarily stopping running and high-impact activities that exacerbate symptoms 1, 3
- Pain relief medications should be prescribed for symptomatic control 1
- Physical therapy and rehabilitation medicine form a cornerstone of conservative management 1
- Corticosteroid injections into the tarsal tunnel can reduce edema and provide symptomatic relief 1
Biomechanical Corrections
- Shoe modifications should address abnormal foot and ankle mechanics, which are commonly cited etiological factors in runners 4, 3
- Orthotic devices may be beneficial to correct biomechanical abnormalities contributing to nerve compression 4
When Conservative Management Typically Succeeds
- Conservative treatment usually gives good results as initial therapy 1
- Most patients respond well to non-operative measures that reduce or remove external compression along the affected area 4
- Three studies demonstrate acceptable results for first-line conservative treatment 5
Predicting Treatment Failure
- Abnormally slow nerve conduction through the posterior tibial nerve on nerve conduction studies usually predicts failure of conservative treatment 1
- This finding should prompt earlier consideration of surgical intervention 1
Duration of Conservative Trial
- Conservative management should be attempted for an adequate trial period before considering surgical options 1, 2
- If symptoms are refractory after appropriate conservative treatment, surgical decompression becomes indicated 1, 4
Critical Diagnostic Considerations
Essential Workup Elements
- Nerve conduction studies (NCS) and electromyography (EMG) should be obtained to confirm the diagnosis and assess nerve function 1
- Imaging tests help identify structural causes of compression (lipomas, cysts, ganglia, varicose veins, anatomic variants) 1, 5
- Tinel's sign testing at the tarsal tunnel is important, as a positive sign predicts better surgical outcomes if conservative treatment fails 1
Differential Diagnosis to Exclude
- Plantar fasciitis - most common alternative diagnosis 1, 3
- Lumbosacral radiculopathy, especially S1 radiculopathy 1
- Metatarsal stress fractures 1
- Morton's neuroma 1
- Achilles tendinitis in runners 3
Common Clinical Pitfalls
- Underdiagnosis is common - tarsal tunnel syndrome is regularly missed, leading to prolonged symptoms 1, 2
- No single test diagnoses with certainty - diagnosis requires correlating clinical history, imaging, NCS, and EMG findings 1
- Idiopathic cases comprise 20% - absence of identifiable cause should not delay treatment 1
- Training errors in runners are frequently overlooked as contributing factors 3
Risk Factors to Identify
- Female gender 5
- Athletic participation, particularly running 5, 3
- Hypothyroidism 5
- Diabetes mellitus 5
- Chronic renal failure and hemodialysis use 5
- Post-traumatic changes 5