Pes Equinus, that is the medical term for a toe walker. I am doing this post as a way to get help. If you are a toe walker, have a toe walker, know a toe walker or work with toe walkers, I want your thoughts. Your experience with any of what I am writing about: orthodics, casts, night splints.
Sarah Kate has seen several pediatricians about her toe walking. She will turn 4 on June 14th. She is able to put her feet down, but they go right back up. She does not present with clonus. We took her a few weeks ago to a pediatric orthopedist in Tulsa. He said that her toe walking is not neurological. He suggested physical therapy if we wanted and then he wanted to evaluate her in a year. This Dr. wants to do casts for six weeks if she is still a toe walker next Feb. He also said her best fix would be to do a recession at age 7 or 8. WE DON"T WANT HER TO HAVE SURGERY. We are trying to avoid that. We have also heard that orthodics can cause problems in the long run. The Dr in Tulsa said that orthodics would not be good for her.
We have learned that drs. and physical therapists have very strong opinions about the subject. Some think she will grow out of it. Some think Cascade orthodics are the answer. Some think casts are the answer. Some think night orthodics are the answer. She started physical therapy this month and she loves it so far.
We want to do what is best for Sarah Kate. It is just hard to know the best.
Thank you!
Sarah Kate has seen several pediatricians about her toe walking. She will turn 4 on June 14th. She is able to put her feet down, but they go right back up. She does not present with clonus. We took her a few weeks ago to a pediatric orthopedist in Tulsa. He said that her toe walking is not neurological. He suggested physical therapy if we wanted and then he wanted to evaluate her in a year. This Dr. wants to do casts for six weeks if she is still a toe walker next Feb. He also said her best fix would be to do a recession at age 7 or 8. WE DON"T WANT HER TO HAVE SURGERY. We are trying to avoid that. We have also heard that orthodics can cause problems in the long run. The Dr in Tulsa said that orthodics would not be good for her.
We have learned that drs. and physical therapists have very strong opinions about the subject. Some think she will grow out of it. Some think Cascade orthodics are the answer. Some think casts are the answer. Some think night orthodics are the answer. She started physical therapy this month and she loves it so far.
We want to do what is best for Sarah Kate. It is just hard to know the best.
Thank you!
Comments
Praying for a great outcome.
Kelly
I am not a doctor but I am a toe walker :)
I have walked on my toes since I learned to walk and I did not receive any treatment of any kind for it other than my parents telling me to not walk on them (and now when my husband catches me - he tells me).
For the most part I did grow out of it (I only occasionally find myself on my toes). I participated in sports when I was school aged such as softball, ice skating, and cheering. I do believe that playing sports and running with other kids cause me to outgrow this bad habit.
Best of luck in making your decision.
erin
If u decide you want to visit with my aunt, I'll be happy to give you her number. She'd be happy to visit.
While our youngest child hasn't been to a physical therapist yet, I will say that it seems that the physical therapists all know much more about toe walking and treatments than any other doctor we have seen. (It sounds like you have seen a specialist though, so that may not be true in your case.)
I'm curious now about what problems orthodics can cause in the long run. I've never heard that. Guess I'll google it. It's been a real frustration for our family. Good luck, and hopefully someone out there will have some great advice/encouragement for you!
She is 6, almost 7, and we still find her on her toes. I really see it when she isn't wearing shoes or thin flipflops. We haven't seen a doctor about it because I didn't think it was that big of a problem. Now I'm wondering if we should address it with a Dr.
We keep her active in sports and she loves to run. (and is very fast) I also make her wear shoes, which she doesn't mind to do.
Sorry that I don't have that much insight. My thought is don't let it stress you and continue with the PT.
I am 35 years old and I have been a toe walker since I learned to walk. I never had any sort of PT and grew up playing all kinds of sports, etc. To this day, I still walk on my toes a good 50-75% of the time. I even do it in flip flops. People point it out to me, or else I wouldn't even notice it. I hope that you are able to find an answer for SK, and that whatever it is, it is a simple fix. I almost wish that someone had done something for me when I was younger simply because people pick on me about it even as an adult!