Dr.Artis was so amazing. After going to two other podiatrists who gave me no support or hope, Dr. artis made me feel like there can be change for me. She was so patient, kind and informative. I’m actually excited to go back and get my results.
Stress fractures of the foot are the product of repetitive mechanical loading that outpaces the bone’s capacity for remodeling the bone accumulates microdamage faster than it can repair it, and a fracture line develops in the absence of any single traumatic event. They are among the most common injuries in runners, military recruits, dancers, and anyone who has rapidly increased their activity on the hard surfaces New York City provides in abundance. They are also among the most frequently undertreated injuries in podiatric practice because initial X-rays are often negative, because patients continue to bear weight without dramatic disability, and because the distinction between low-risk and high-risk stress fracture locations determines treatment protocols that diverge significantly. At Healthy Feet Podiatry, our NYC stress fracture specialists make that distinction on every case.
A stress fracture of the foot is an incomplete fracture of a metatarsal, tarsal, sesamoid, or phalangeal bone resulting from cumulative fatigue loading rather than acute trauma. Stress fractures are classified by location into low-risk and high-risk categories based on their blood supply characteristics, healing propensity, and consequences of treatment failure. Low-risk stress fractures including second, third, and fourth metatarsal shaft fractures occur in regions of good vascular supply, respond reliably to activity restriction and protected weight-bearing, and rarely require surgical intervention. High-risk stress fractures include the fifth metatarsal base (Jones fracture) at the metaphyseal-diaphyseal junction, a watershed vascular zone with poor intrinsic healing; the navicular, which bears extreme compressive and shear forces at midfoot; the sesamoids, subject to repetitive plantar loading; and the medial malleolus in its tibial extension, though the latter is managed in ankle fracture protocols. High-risk fractures in athletes, active patients, or those with delayed presentation are frequently managed with surgical fixation to achieve reliable union and early return to activity conservative management of these fractures carries significant refracture and nonunion risk that is not acceptable in high-demand patients.

Stress fracture treatment at Healthy Feet Podiatry begins with MRI if initial X-ray is negative and clinical suspicion is high MRI detects stress reactions and early stress fractures before cortical breach is visible on plain film, changing management in a clinically meaningful proportion of cases. Low-risk metatarsal stress fractures are managed with a removable walking boot for four to six weeks, activity modification, load-reduction guidance, and a structured return-to-activity protocol that rebuilds load progressively to prevent recurrence. Bone density evaluation is initiated for patients with stress fractures in low-loading scenarios, multiple stress fractures, or demographic risk factors suggesting metabolic bone disease or relative energy deficiency. High-risk fractures are immobilized in a non-weight-bearing cast or boot and evaluated for surgical fixation using intramedullary screw fixation a technically precise procedure that our NYC surgical team performs in accredited outpatient facilities, with post-operative return to running typically achievable at three to four months in competitive athletes.

TESTIMONIAL
Dr.Artis was so amazing. After going to two other podiatrists who gave me no support or hope, Dr. artis made me feel like there can be change for me. She was so patient, kind and informative. I’m actually excited to go back and get my results.
Everyone was super friendly. Doctor Rick’s explained everything thoroughly.
Dr Bell was incredibly thorough and personable. Gave me great information and useful information for my next steps. A great experience!
“Fast, professional, and very clean office. I was checked in and seen within 10 minutes of my scheduled time. Dr. Ricks was straight to the point but thorough. The front desk staff was also incredibly helpful.
All of the staff are super welcoming and professional! Bianca took excellent care in getting my X-rays. Dr. Ricks was thorough in explaining my diagnosis and next steps. Highly recommended!!
Well before I came in today to see Dr. Ricks my foot in pain was 9/10 and now I feel good 🙏🏿🤩 thanks
Behind every great care experience is a team that truly listens. Our doctors are committed to understanding your needs, delivering personalized treatment, and supporting you every step of your health journey.

Dr. Farah Alani is a New York City foot and ankle surgeon at To Healthy Feet Podiatry, a boutique podiatry practice located in the heart…

Dr. Alison Bell was born in Manhattan and is a Public Health graduate of Charles R. Drew University. She obtained her medical degree from Kent…

Dr. Roxann Clarke is a graduate of Hampton University in Virginia, where she obtained her Bachelor of Science in Biology and her Master of Science…

Dr. Ricks is a board-certified fellowship-trained podiatric surgeon committed to delivering top-tier foot and ankle care. From New Jersey, she a Bachelor’s in…

As the Chief Operating Officer of To Healthy Feet Podiatry, Tiffany provides leadership to ensure all administrative are producing optimal results. Dr….
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