“I have Plantar Fasciitis and Doctor was very patient with me, providing exercise and answers to all my questions and I am now seeing improvement for the first time in months.”Google reviewer · Google
“He finally freed me from my plantar fasciitis! Orthotics he casted for me are something exceptional.”Google reviewer · Google
“For nearly fifteen years, I have seen countless foot doctors for pain in my foot. Dr. Patish's diagnosis was dead on. He was the only doctor that got it right.”A. Holston · Google
“Dr Patish and his staff are great! I've gone in with mainly plantar fasciitis… he helped immensely! Knowledgeable in many areas.”Google reviewer · Google
“He is amazing… tells me what is really wrong… truly cares.”Healthgrades reviewer · Healthgrades
“Totally my kind of doctor — tiny office, lots of time, lots of good questions, and a GREAT personable, droll man.”Google reviewer · Google
“I have Plantar Fasciitis and Doctor was very patient with me, providing exercise and answers to all my questions and I am now seeing improvement for the first time in months.”Google reviewer · Google
“He finally freed me from my plantar fasciitis! Orthotics he casted for me are something exceptional.”Google reviewer · Google
“For nearly fifteen years, I have seen countless foot doctors for pain in my foot. Dr. Patish's diagnosis was dead on. He was the only doctor that got it right.”A. Holston · Google
“Dr Patish and his staff are great! I've gone in with mainly plantar fasciitis… he helped immensely! Knowledgeable in many areas.”Google reviewer · Google
“He is amazing… tells me what is really wrong… truly cares.”Healthgrades reviewer · Healthgrades
“Totally my kind of doctor — tiny office, lots of time, lots of good questions, and a GREAT personable, droll man.”Google reviewer · Google
“I have Plantar Fasciitis and Doctor was very patient with me, providing exercise and answers to all my questions and I am now seeing improvement for the first time in months.”Google reviewer · Google
“He finally freed me from my plantar fasciitis! Orthotics he casted for me are something exceptional.”Google reviewer · Google
“For nearly fifteen years, I have seen countless foot doctors for pain in my foot. Dr. Patish's diagnosis was dead on. He was the only doctor that got it right.”A. Holston · Google
“Dr Patish and his staff are great! I've gone in with mainly plantar fasciitis… he helped immensely! Knowledgeable in many areas.”Google reviewer · Google
“He is amazing… tells me what is really wrong… truly cares.”Healthgrades reviewer · Healthgrades
“Totally my kind of doctor — tiny office, lots of time, lots of good questions, and a GREAT personable, droll man.”Google reviewer · Google
“I have Plantar Fasciitis and Doctor was very patient with me, providing exercise and answers to all my questions and I am now seeing improvement for the first time in months.”Google reviewer · Google
“He finally freed me from my plantar fasciitis! Orthotics he casted for me are something exceptional.”Google reviewer · Google
“For nearly fifteen years, I have seen countless foot doctors for pain in my foot. Dr. Patish's diagnosis was dead on. He was the only doctor that got it right.”A. Holston · Google
“Dr Patish and his staff are great! I've gone in with mainly plantar fasciitis… he helped immensely! Knowledgeable in many areas.”Google reviewer · Google
“He is amazing… tells me what is really wrong… truly cares.”Healthgrades reviewer · Healthgrades
“Totally my kind of doctor — tiny office, lots of time, lots of good questions, and a GREAT personable, droll man.”Google reviewer · Google
Plantar Plate Tear
Your rehabilitation guide for plantar plate tear — evidence-based exercises to reduce pain and restore function.
At a glance: The plantar plate is a thick fibrocartilage pad on the bottom of each lesser toe joint (MTP joint) that acts as a stabilizer and shock absorber. When it tears — usually at the second toe from chronic overloading — the toe drifts upward and crosses over or under the adjacent toe. It's one of the most underdiagnosed conditions in the forefoot because it mimics metatarsalgia and neuromas. Early treatment with taping, offloading, and targeted exercises can prevent progressive deformity.
⚠️ See Dr. Patish Before Starting Exercises
This condition can involve structural damage that requires professional evaluation. Even mild pain can be a sign of a more serious injury that could get worse with exercise. Please call (760) 728-4800 to schedule an evaluation before beginning this exercise program.
Understanding Plantar Plate Tear
Each lesser toe MTP joint has a plantar plate — a dense ligamentous structure that prevents the toe from hyperextending and keeps the metatarsal head cushioned during push-off. When the second metatarsal is long, when a bunion shifts weight laterally, or when chronic metatarsalgia goes untreated, the plantar plate at the second MTP stretches and eventually tears. The hallmark sign is the 'crossover toe' — the second toe drifting toward the big toe. A positive 'drawer test' (the toe can be pulled upward significantly) confirms the clinical diagnosis.
Common Symptoms
- Pain at the ball of the foot directly under the second toe
- The second toe drifting upward or toward the big toe
- A feeling of walking on a lump under the ball of the foot
- Swelling at the base of the second toe
- Pain that worsens with barefoot walking and push-off
The Walking Self-Test
Before you begin any exercises, this simple self-test shows you what your feet are actually doing when you walk. Most of us have no idea — we just walk. But your feet may have quietly developed blind spots: parts of the sole that don't engage anymore, toes that don't push off, or an arch that has checked out. This test takes 60 seconds and gives you a personal baseline you can revisit after each week of exercises to feel your progress.
How to do it: Take off your shoes and socks. Walk slowly across a room — about 10 steps. Pay close attention to each step and notice: Does your heel land first, or does your whole foot slap down at once? As your weight moves forward, do you feel it roll through your arch? Do all five toes engage and push off at the end of the step, or do some of them just ride along? Is one foot doing more work than the other? Don't try to "fix" anything — just notice. That awareness is the starting point. Repeat this test after one week of doing your exercises. Most patients are surprised by how much they can feel changing.
Do this before your very first exercise session, then repeat it once a week. It's your personal progress tracker — no equipment, no numbers, just awareness. Many patients tell us this simple test was the moment they realized their feet weren't working the way they thought.
How to Monitor Pain During Exercise
Use a 0–10 scale to rate your pain during exercise, where 0 is no pain and 10 is the worst imaginable.
Which Level Should I Start At?
Pain ≤3 out of 10 at rest. You're walking normally. Daily activities are manageable with minor discomfort.
Pain 4–6 out of 10. You might be limping or avoiding certain activities. Some things you used to do easily are now uncomfortable.
Pain 7+ out of 10. Walking is difficult. You may need to hold onto furniture or avoid standing altogether.
Start With These Exercises
Towel Curl
This exercise strengthens the small muscles on the bottom of your foot — called the intrinsic foot muscles. These are the muscles that support your arch from the inside, kind of like a built-in orthotic. When they're strong, they help distribute your body weight more evenly, protect against overpronation (your foot rolling inward too much), and take stress off the plantar fascia, tendons, and joints.
What to expect: You may not feel dramatic changes in the first few weeks, but stick with it — these small muscles take time to build. By 6–8 weeks, many patients notice better arch support, less foot fatigue at the end of the day, and improved balance. The research shows measurable strength gains by 4–6 weeks.
How to do it: Sit in a chair with your bare feet flat on the floor. Lay a small towel flat under your foot. Curl your toes to scrunch the towel toward you — like you're trying to pick it up with your toes — then spread your toes flat and repeat. Try to use all five toes, not just the big one.
| Level | Hold | Reps | Sets | How Often | Tips |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mild | 3–5 sec per curl | 10 | 3 | 1×/day | Focus on curling with all your toes evenly — it takes practice, and that's okay |
| Moderate | 3 sec per curl | 8 | 2 | 1×/day | Use a thin towel on a smooth floor to make it easier |
| Severe | 2 sec per curl | 5 | 1 | 1×/day | If the towel is too hard, just practice curling your toes on carpet without it |
How to progress: Start with a thin towel on a smooth floor → thicker towel → place a small water bottle at the far end of the towel for added resistance. When seated feels easy, try it standing.
⚠ When to skip this: Hold off if you're recovering from hammertoe surgery or an acute plantar plate tear (first 4 weeks). Your surgeon will let you know when it's safe to start.
Resistance Band Eversion
This exercise strengthens the peroneal muscles — the muscles on the outside of your lower leg that prevent your ankle from rolling inward. Think of them as your ankle's natural brace. After a sprain, these muscles often weaken and their reflexes slow down, which is a big reason why people re-sprain the same ankle. Resistance band training rebuilds that strength and re-trains the "catch reflex" that protects you.
What to expect: By 4–6 weeks, your ankle should feel noticeably more stable during walking and on uneven surfaces. Strength testing typically shows meaningful improvement by 6 weeks. The real win: a significantly lower chance of re-spraining your ankle — studies show up to 50% reduction in re-injury with consistent peroneal training.
How to do it: Sit with your legs out in front of you. Loop a resistance band around the ball of your foot and anchor the other end to something sturdy (a table leg works well) or your other foot. Slowly turn the sole of your foot outward against the band's resistance, then return slowly. Keep your knee still — the movement should come from your ankle, not your leg.
| Level | Hold | Reps | Sets | How Often | Tips |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mild | 2 sec at end range | 15 | 3 | 1×/day | Use a medium band. Go slow: 3 seconds out, 2-second hold, 3 seconds back. Control matters more than speed |
| Moderate | 2 sec at end range | 10 | 2 | 1×/day | Use a light band. Slow and smooth — don't let the band snap your foot back |
| Severe | 1 sec at end range | 8 | 1 | every other day | Use the lightest band you can find. Stay in a pain-free range. If your ankle swells after, ice it and rest a day |
How to progress: Light band → medium → heavy. Once eversion is solid, add inversion (turning inward) and dorsiflexion/plantarflexion (up and down) to work all four directions. The ultimate progression: standing on one leg while doing band work.
⚠ When to skip this: Wait at least 72 hours after an acute ankle sprain before starting. Don't do this if you have a peroneal tendon that's subluxing (popping out of its groove) — that needs to be addressed first. Post-surgical: wait until Dr. Patish clears you.
Wall Calf Stretch — Gastrocnemius (Straight Knee)
This stretch targets the gastrocnemius — the big, powerful calf muscle that gives your leg its shape. It crosses both the knee and the ankle, which is why you stretch it with a straight knee. When this muscle is tight (a condition called equinus), it forces the front of your foot to work overtime with every step, contributing to heel pain, bunions, metatarsalgia, Achilles problems, and more. Loosening it up is one of the single most impactful things you can do for your feet.
What to expect: You should feel a noticeable difference in ankle flexibility within 2–4 weeks of daily stretching. Many patients report that heel pain and forefoot pressure begin to ease as the calf loosens. The clinical goal is at least 10 degrees of ankle dorsiflexion (the ability to pull your foot up toward your shin) — your podiatrist can measure this at your visit.
How to do it: Stand facing a wall with your hands flat at shoulder height. Step one foot back about 2 feet. Keep the back knee STRAIGHT and the heel firmly on the ground — this is the key. Lean gently into the wall until you feel a good stretch in the upper calf of the back leg. Keep your toes pointed forward, not turned out.
| Level | Hold | Reps | Sets | How Often | Tips |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mild | 30 sec | 3 | 1 | 3×/day | That's 90 seconds per leg, per session. It should feel like a firm, satisfying stretch — not pain |
| Moderate | 30 sec | 2 | 1 | 2×/day | Don't lean as far into the wall if the stretch is uncomfortable. Heel stays down no matter what |
| Severe | 20 sec | 2 | 1 | 1×/day | If standing is too much, try the seated version: sit with your leg out, loop a towel around the ball of your foot, and gently pull your foot toward you |
How to progress: Increase hold time to 45–60 seconds. Try slight toe-in and toe-out angles to stretch different parts of the muscle. Eventually, you can do this on a slant board for a deeper stretch.
⚠ When to skip this: Do not do this if you suspect an Achilles rupture (a sudden pop or snap in the calf). If you have insertional Achilles tendinopathy (pain right where the tendon meets the heel bone), do NOT stretch past neutral — stop before you feel the heel stretch. DVT (blood clot) suspicion: if your calf is swollen, red, and warm, see a doctor immediately instead of stretching.
Frozen Bottle Roll
Two therapies in one: ice massage and plantar fascia mobilization. The cold reduces pain and any residual inflammation, while the rolling pressure massages and loosens the tight fascia along the bottom of your foot. It's the same principle as a deep tissue massage, but you control the pressure, and the ice takes the edge off. Many patients call this their favorite exercise because it just feels good.
What to expect: Immediate pain relief during and after rolling — most people feel better within the first session. Used consistently (especially after being on your feet all day or after exercise), it helps manage day-to-day pain while your other exercises do the longer-term healing work.
How to do it: Freeze a water bottle (fill it about ¾ full so it doesn't crack). Sit in a chair and place the bottle under the arch of your foot. Roll it slowly back and forth from your heel to the ball of your foot, using gentle downward pressure. Let it feel like a massage — firm enough to feel the relief, not so hard it hurts.
| Level | Hold | Reps | Sets | How Often | Tips |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mild | continuous rolling | 1 | 1 | 2–3×/day | Roll for 5–10 minutes per session. Moderate pressure — it should feel like a deep massage. Best after activity or at the end of the day |
| Moderate | continuous rolling | 1 | 1 | 2×/day | Roll for 5–8 minutes. Light pressure. If the frozen bottle is too intense, try a cold can from the fridge instead |
| Severe | continuous rolling | 1 | 1 | 3×/day (especially morning and evening) | Roll for 5 minutes. Very light pressure — let gravity do the work. If the cold is too much, use a tennis ball at room temperature and ice separately |
How to progress: Frozen bottle → golf ball at room temperature for a deeper, more targeted massage. Increase rolling pressure as your comfort allows. Great to use as a warm-up before your other exercises and a cool-down afterward.
⚠ When to skip this: Skip the frozen bottle (use room-temperature ball instead) if you have Raynaud's phenomenon (fingers/toes that turn white in the cold) or cold sensitivity. Avoid if you have an open wound on your sole. Use extra caution with diabetic neuropathy — if your feet have reduced sensation, you may not feel if the ice is too cold, so limit to 5 minutes and check your skin.
When to See Dr. Patish
If your second toe is starting to drift or cross over, don't wait — this condition is progressive. Dr. Patish can perform the drawer test, confirm with ultrasound, and start treatment before the deformity becomes fixed. Early taping and offloading combined with exercises can often avoid surgery.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this the same as metatarsalgia?
No, but they often coexist and feel similar. Metatarsalgia is general overloading of the metatarsal heads. A plantar plate tear is a specific structural injury to the stabilizing ligament under the toe. The key differentiator is whether the toe is drifting upward — if it is, the plantar plate is likely involved.
Need personalized guidance? Dr. Patish can evaluate your specific condition and adjust this program to your needs.



























