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Los Angeles Orthopedic
Foot & Ankle · Conditions A–Z

Peripheral Neuropathy foot numbness

Peripheral neuropathy is damage to the nerves of the feet and hands, producing numbness, tingling, or burning — with many possible causes that need evaluation. Same-day or next-week evaluations across eight LA-area offices.

Los Angeles orthopedic specialist evaluating a patient for peripheral neuropathy — LAOSS board-certified care across eight LA offices
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Experts in foot & ankle care.

Surgical and non-surgical options at LAOSS.

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Common foot & ankle concerns we treat

  • Pain that limits walking, lifting, or sleep
  • Stiffness, swelling, or reduced range of motion
  • Sports injuries — acute or overuse
  • Arthritis or post-traumatic joint changes
  • Conditions other doctors couldn't resolve

What sets LAOSS apart

  • Same- or next-day appointments at eight Los Angeles–area offices
  • On-site imaging; PT coordinated with your in-network provider
  • Conservative-first care, surgery only when needed
  • Board-certified specialists, not generalists
Key takeaways
  • Peripheral Neuropathy is one of many foot & ankle conditions our specialists evaluate every day.
  • Treatment starts with finding the cause — diabetes, vitamin deficiency, thyroid disease, medications — then controlling symptoms and protecting the feet.
  • Nerve-pain medication, footwear changes, and regular foot care control symptoms for most patients — surgery is rarely part of the picture.
  • On-site imaging at most offices and same-day appointments across eight Los Angeles–area locations.
Overview

What is peripheral neuropathy?

Peripheral neuropathy is damage to the nerves of the feet and hands, producing numbness, tingling, or burning — with many possible causes that need evaluation. Symptoms can develop gradually or after a specific injury, so early evaluation matters when function starts to decline.

Peripheral neuropathy is managed by finding and treating the cause — diabetes, vitamin B12 deficiency, thyroid disease, medication side effects, and alcohol use are among the most common — alongside medication for nerve pain (gabapentin, pregabalin, duloxetine) when symptoms disrupt sleep or daily life, plus balance work and protective foot care. Surgery is rarely part of treatment; the exception is a specific compressed nerve, such as tarsal tunnel syndrome, that testing confirms and a procedure can release.

Below, we walk through the anatomy involved, the symptoms and causes we most often see, how we diagnose peripheral neuropathy, and the full range of treatment options — from the simplest to the most involved.

Patient education

Watch: Tarsal Tunnel Syndrome (Posterior Tibial Neuralgia)

This condition, also called TTS, affects the tibial nerve in the ankle. This nerve is a branch of the sciatic nerve. It passes from the leg down to the foot. Just below the bony bump on the inner side of the ankle, it passes through a small space called the tarsal tunnel. TTS is a compression of the nerve within this tunnel.

Animations licensed from ViewMedica · Swarm Interactive

Anatomical illustration of the foot and ankle showing the tibia, talus, calcaneus, and plantar fascia
Anatomy of the foot & ankle — tibia, talus, calcaneus, metatarsals, and the plantar fascia.
Anatomy

Inside the foot & ankle.

The foot and ankle have 26 bones, more than 30 joints, and over 100 ligaments and tendons. The plantar fascia spans the bottom of the foot, the Achilles tendon anchors the calf to the heel, and the ankle is a hinge that handles every step you take. Most foot and ankle problems trace back to overload, alignment, or footwear that doesn't match the way your foot is built.

Self-orient

When peripheral neuropathy shows up.

Symptoms

Common symptoms

  • Numbness or tingling in the feet or hands
  • Burning or shooting pain
  • Balance problems
  • A feeling of walking on cotton
Causes

Common causes

  • Diabetes (most common)
  • Vitamin deficiencies (B12)
  • Alcohol use
  • Medication side effects, autoimmune disease, or idiopathic
Diagnostics

How we diagnose peripheral neuropathy

You want answers, fast — and we're built to give them. Most patients leave their first LAOSS visit with a clear diagnosis and a written plan, not another referral chain.

Here's what your initial visit for peripheral neuropathy typically looks like:

  • Detailed history — when it started, what makes it better or worse, what you've already tried
  • Sensory testing — monofilament and vibration testing — plus balance and strength assessment
  • Targeted work-up — lab tests (blood sugar, B12, thyroid) and nerve-conduction studies when the cause needs clarifying
  • A written plan covering cause-directed treatment, symptom control, and foot protection, in plain English

Schedule your evaluation with a trusted Greater Los Angeles orthopedic expert today.

Treatment options

How we treat peripheral neuropathy at LAOSS

Once we've confirmed the diagnosis, the next step is matching the right treatment to your situation. We start with the least-invasive option that fits — and escalate only when it doesn't.

Conservative care
Step 1

Cause-directed & symptom care

The priority is identifying why the nerves are affected — then controlling symptoms.

  • Work-up for treatable causes — blood sugar, B12, thyroid, medications
  • Nerve-pain medication (gabapentin, pregabalin, duloxetine)
  • Balance and strengthening exercises when numbness affects stability
  • Well-fitted, protective footwear and inserts
Surgical care
When needed

Foot protection & rare procedures

Numb feet need surveillance — and a small subset of patients have a compressed nerve that can be released.

  • Regular podiatric foot exams when sensation is reduced
  • Professional nail and callus care to prevent wounds
  • Nerve-release surgery only for a confirmed entrapment such as tarsal tunnel syndrome
Surgeon expertise

Why experience matters.

Why experience matters

Foot & ankle care is highly technique-dependent. Volume, training, and judgment together determine the outcome you actually feel six months later.

  • Precise diagnosis from imaging and exam
  • Conservative-first care that avoids unnecessary surgery
  • Surgical technique refined over thousands of cases
  • On-site imaging + coordinated PT through your in-network provider

The LAOSS approach

Our foot & ankle specialists move stepwise — start with the least-invasive option that fits your situation, escalate only when it doesn't.

  • Same-day imaging at most offices
  • PT coordinated in your insurance network
  • Board-certified surgeons performing the procedures themselves
  • Direct access to your specialist between visits
Candidacy

Am I a candidate?

If most of these match your situation, an evaluation with a foot & ankle specialist is the next step.

You may be

You may be a candidate if

These signs typically point toward an in-person evaluation with a foot & ankle specialist.

  • Pain or stiffness in the foot & ankle that lasts more than a few days
  • Swelling, instability, or noticeable change in function
  • Symptoms that limit walking, lifting, sleep, or work
  • Previous treatment that didn't fully resolve the problem
  • Imaging or exam findings that suggest an underlying issue
Evaluation

What evaluation includes

Your first visit is built to give you an answer the same day, not just another referral.

  • Detailed history — onset, mechanism, what makes it better or worse
  • Hands-on exam focused on the affected joint or region
  • On-site imaging at most offices (X-ray, ultrasound)
  • Clear plan with options ranging from conservative to surgical
  • Same-day or next-day scheduling for any follow-up tests
ImportantSeek urgent evaluation for sudden severe pain, numbness, progressive weakness, loss of bowel or bladder control, or any sign of infection (fever, increasing redness or swelling).
Recovery

Your foot & ankle recovery roadmap.

Recovery is rarely a straight line — but a clear plan with measurable milestones makes the path predictable.

01Days 0–14

Right after care

In the first two weeks we focus on protecting the foot & ankle, calming inflammation, and restoring basic motion.

  • Activity modification with clear do/don't guidance
  • Ice, elevation, and pain control as needed
  • Gentle range-of-motion within safe limits
  • Follow-up scheduled to track healing
02Weeks 2–8

Rehabilitation

Targeted physical therapy rebuilds strength, mobility, and confidence in the foot & ankle.

  • Progressive strengthening and neuromuscular work
  • Manual therapy and soft-tissue treatment
  • Sport- or job-specific movement re-training
  • Coordinated PT through your in-network provider
03Months 2+

Long-term care

Once function is restored, the focus shifts to keeping you there — and catching any recurrence early.

  • Return-to-activity plan with measured benchmarks
  • Home program tailored to your sport or job
  • Maintenance visits or imaging if symptoms change
  • Direct line back to your specialist if needed
Risks & considerations

What to weigh before you decide.

We talk through the risks and benefits with every patient — informed consent is a conversation, not a form.

General

General considerations

Every orthopedic intervention carries a small set of standard risks. We screen, prepare, and monitor for these on every patient.

  • Infection (rare with modern technique and prophylaxis)
  • Bleeding or bruising at the treatment site
  • Reaction to anesthesia or medications
  • Need for additional procedures in some cases
Specific

Foot & ankle-specific considerations

Some risks are tied to the structures we're treating in the foot & ankle. We discuss these in detail at your visit so you can weigh them against the benefits.

  • Temporary stiffness or weakness during recovery
  • Incomplete pain relief in a small percentage of cases
  • Nerve or vessel irritation near the treatment area
  • Need for follow-up therapy to fully restore function
Your care team

Meet our foot & ankle doctors in the Greater Los Angeles area

At LAOSS, our foot & ankle specialists combine advanced surgical expertise with a patient-first approach. From minimally invasive arthroscopic techniques to joint replacement and arthritis management, our physicians bring decades of experience to every case. Trusted across Los Angeles, our team is dedicated to restoring mobility, relieving pain, and helping you return to the activities you love.

Specialists

Meet your foot & ankle specialists.

4 providers
About this care

Reliable Peripheral Neuropathy pain relief starts here

Don't let peripheral neuropathy be something you just power through. At LAOSS, expert care is close to home. With same- or next-day appointments at multiple Los Angeles locations, you'll never wait weeks or months for answers. Our team offers comprehensive treatment from diagnosis through recovery. From identifying the cause to controlling symptoms and protecting your feet, you'll receive coordinated, personalized care every step of the way.

Call or schedule online today to begin your recovery with a trusted foot & ankle specialist in Los Angeles. Relief, confidence, and renewed strength are within reach.

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FAQ

Common peripheral neuropathy questions

  • Diagnosis starts with your history and a focused exam, including monofilament and vibration sensory testing. Because peripheral neuropathy has many causes, we often add lab work — blood sugar, vitamin B12, thyroid — and nerve-conduction studies when needed. Most patients leave the first visit with a clear assessment and a written plan.
  • Usually not. Most peripheral neuropathy is managed by treating the underlying cause, medication for nerve pain, and protective foot care. The exception is when testing confirms a specific compressed nerve — such as tarsal tunnel syndrome — where releasing the nerve can help. Surgery cannot repair diffuse nerve damage, so accurate diagnosis comes first.
  • If foot & ankle pain lasts more than a few days, limits movement, or interferes with daily activities, it's time to see a doctor. Sudden injuries, swelling, or weakness should be evaluated right away.
  • If you have a PPO plan, no referral is needed — book directly with any of our specialists. HMO plans require a referral from your PCP. If you are unsure, call us at (323) 264-7600 and our team will walk you through it.
Ready when you are

Don't wait on pain.

Book a visit with a foot & ankle specialist at any of our eight Los Angeles–area offices.

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