“Amazing staff and a wonderful doctor! Everyone was so kind and gentle — we felt truly cared for.”
Ariana O. · Google
“Dr Grigoriy is the absolute best… the man to go and see!”
Uk Charlie · Google
“Best Podiatrist ever!! Every time I come with pain I leave feeling great!”
Wendy A. · Google
“Pain was instantly gone.”
Danny M. · Google
“Orthotics have changed my life… listened… made custom orthotics.”
Sarah T. · Yelp
“Friendly and professional… full exam… I always leave satisfied.”
Jason H. · Yelp
“Highly recommend… foreign object extraction and ingrown toenail removal.”
Max L. · Yelp
“Staff is always friendly… explains everything in detail.”
Barbara P. · Yelp
“He is amazing… tells me what is really wrong… truly cares.”
Healthgrades reviewer · Healthgrades
“The doctor went in, did his thing fast and efficiently. The team helped me find the most cost-friendly options.”
Recent Patient · Google
“A front office that runs smoothly, staffed by truly competent people — the doctor MUST be a true professional.”
Sherrill J. · Google
“Amazing staff and a wonderful doctor! Everyone was so kind and gentle — we felt truly cared for.”
Ariana O. · Google
“Dr Grigoriy is the absolute best… the man to go and see!”
Uk Charlie · Google
“Best Podiatrist ever!! Every time I come with pain I leave feeling great!”
Wendy A. · Google
“Pain was instantly gone.”
Danny M. · Google
“Orthotics have changed my life… listened… made custom orthotics.”
Sarah T. · Yelp
“Friendly and professional… full exam… I always leave satisfied.”
Jason H. · Yelp
“Highly recommend… foreign object extraction and ingrown toenail removal.”
Max L. · Yelp
“Staff is always friendly… explains everything in detail.”
Barbara P. · Yelp
“He is amazing… tells me what is really wrong… truly cares.”
Healthgrades reviewer · Healthgrades
“The doctor went in, did his thing fast and efficiently. The team helped me find the most cost-friendly options.”
Recent Patient · Google
“A front office that runs smoothly, staffed by truly competent people — the doctor MUST be a true professional.”
Sherrill J. · Google

When Should You Actually See a Podiatrist?

Not every foot ache needs a doctor. But some do — and waiting can make things worse. Here's how to tell the difference.

Dr. Grigoriy N. Patish, DPM February 14, 2026
5 min read

The foot is a meeting point for dermatologic and rheumatologic conditions in ways that aren't always obvious. Skin lesions that look routine elsewhere on the body behave differently on weight-bearing surfaces. Inflammatory arthritis that's well-controlled systemically can still wreak quiet havoc on forefoot joints. And nail conditions that seem purely cosmetic can have structural drivers that need a different kind of attention.

From Dermatology: When the Foot Changes the Equation

Plantar warts that resist standard topical therapy are the most common dermatology-to-podiatry referral. The thickened skin on the sole of the foot creates a barrier that over-the-counter treatments and even office-applied acids struggle to penetrate. We use multi-modal approaches including sharp debridement and chemical cautery — and we biopsy when lesions look atypical.

Problem nails — recurrent ingrown toenails that keep coming back, dystrophic nails that need procedural care, fungal nails that haven't responded to oral or topical antifungals. Laser treatment offers another pathway for stubborn cases.

Corns and calluses that keep returning despite debridement often have a structural cause — a hammertoe, a prominent metatarsal head, a bone spur underneath. Removing the callus gives temporary relief; addressing the underlying bone spur or deformity gives lasting resolution.

From Rheumatology: When Systemic Disease Hits the Foot

Gout loves the first MTP joint. Acute flares are managed medically, but the chronic consequences — tophi affecting footwear, skin breakdown over deposits, joint stiffness — often need podiatric management including accommodative orthotics and sometimes surgical excision.

Rheumatoid arthritis forefoot deformity — MTP subluxations, bunions, hammertoes from joint erosion — causes progressive pain with weight-bearing. Custom orthotics, accommodative footwear, and surgical correction when the deformity becomes disabling.

Plantar fasciitis vs. enthesitis is a diagnostic distinction that matters. In spondyloarthropathies, heel pain may look like classic plantar fasciitis but actually represents inflammatory enthesopathy requiring a different treatment approach.

How to Refer

We work with dermatologists and rheumatologists throughout the region. See our dermatology referral page and rheumatology referral page for specifics, or visit our referral hub.

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